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Publication : Cadmium induced limb defects in mice: strain associated differences in sensitivity.

First Author  Layton WM Jr Year  1979
Journal  Teratology Volume  19
Issue  2 Pages  229-35
PubMed ID  473073 Mgi Jnum  J:6189
Mgi Id  MGI:54666 Doi  10.1002/tera.1420190213
Citation  Layton WM Jr, et al. (1979) Cadmium induced limb defects in mice: strain associated differences in sensitivity. Teratology 19(2):229-35
abstractText  Cadmium (CdSO4) was given ip on day 9 at 12 or 24 mumol/kg to pregnant CD-1 (non-inbred) mice. Fetuses showed malformations of the limbs, face, trunk, and tail. There was a statistically significant relationship between the dose of cadmium and the malformation rate. Cadmium (12 mumol/kg ip on day 9) was then given to mice of six inbred strains three of which (A/J, BALB/cJ, and C57BL6J) carry a gene cdm for resistance to cadmium-induced testicular damage, and three strains (AKR/J, CBA/J, and DBA/2J) which do not. Paradoxically, the three strains resistant to cadmium induced testicular damage were significantly more sensitive to its teratogenic effects than were the other three strains. In all inbred strains most malformations involved the limbs. All forelimb defects found in inbred or non-inbred cadmium treated mice were postaxial and indistinguishable from those produced by acetazolamide in mice. The remarkable similarity of the cadmium- and acetazolamide-induced forelimb malformations may be a reflection of the limited number of ways that a rodent forelimb can react to a teratogenic insult. The hindlimb defects were all preaxial.
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