Around 60% of the mouse mutants called curly-tail, have tail aberrations in the form of a coil or a kink, with or without lumbosacral spina bifida, and rarely, exencephaly. These neural tube defects (NTD) are the result of an incompletely penetrant recessive gene. A single injection of various doses (1-6 mg/kg) of the DNA inhibitor mitomycin C was given to pregnant curly-tail mice on day 7, 8, or 9 of gestation, and its effect on the NTD of the embryos was noted. No dose used was lethal to the embryo. When given on day 7 or day 8, mitomycin C markedly increased the number of exencephalics, and additionally, on day 8, it reduced the number of posterior abnormalities. However, on day 9, no exencephaly was produced, and there was a drastic reduction in the number of tail and spinal defects, the overall incidence of NTD being as low as 15% with 2 mg/kg. A twofold effect of mitomycin C on the curly-tail embryos was thus observed--according to the time in development it was administered, firstly, a teratogenic effect, and later, a "remedial" or preventive effect.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420330308DOI Listing

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