M. Inouye et al., DISTURBANCE OF NEURONAL MIGRATION IN MOUSE CEREBRAL-CORTEX BY LOW-DOSE GAMMA-RADIATION, Journal of radiation research, 34(3), 1993, pp. 204-213
We show that neuronal migration is disturbed by low-dose gamma-radiati
on of 0.24 Gy in the developing cerebral cortex of mice and suggest th
at neuronal progenitors in the S phase of mitosis are more sensitive t
han those in the G1/G0 phase. To pulse-label the fetal cells pregnant
Slc:ICR mice were injected with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) at 10.00 pm o
n day 16 of pregnancy or at 9.30 am on day 17. The mice then were expo
sed to 0.24 Gy gamma- or sham-irradiation at 10.00 am on day 17 of pre
gnancy. At the time of exposure cells labeled on day 16 were regarded
as having completed mitosis, and those labeled on day 17 as being in t
he S phase. Cell death in the fetal ventricular zone after exposure wa
s negligible. Dams were allowed to give birth and rear their litters.
Brain samples obtained from offspring on the 2nd day after birth and a
t 6 weeks of age were used for the immunohistochemical examination of
BrdU-labeled cells. Labeled cells remaining in the ventricular zone we
re significantly more numerous in irradiated animals than in sham-expo
sed ones on the 2nd day after birth, in mice treated prenatally with B
rdU on day 17 of pregnancy; whereas, mice treated with BrdU on day 16
showed no statistically significant difference. At 6 weeks of age, in
both groups most of the labeled cells were present in layers II-III of
the SmI cerebral cortex. But, in the irradiated animals the labeled c
ells in these layers were significantly fewer and those in layers IV-V
I more numerous than in the sham-exposed mice in both group treated wi
th BrdU on day 16 or 17.