1. Genetic disorders in house mouse germ cells after the Chernobyl catastrophe.
- Author
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Pomerantseva MD, Ramaiya LK, and Chekhovich AV
- Subjects
- Animals, Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Female, Fetal Death, Genes, Lethal, Genes, Recessive, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Inbred CBA, Pregnancy, Radioactive Pollutants toxicity, Sperm Head pathology, Translocation, Genetic, Ukraine, Mice genetics, Mutation, Power Plants, Radioactive Hazard Release, Spermatozoa physiology, Spermatozoa radiation effects
- Abstract
Genetic effects were studied in house mice caught from 1986 to 1994 in regions polluted by radionuclides as a result of the Chernobyl disaster. The dose rates of gamma-radiation on the soil surface ranged from 0.0002 to 2 mGy/h. The frequency of reciprocal translocations in mouse spermatocytes was relatively low, but increased with the dose rate. Embryo mortality was increased only in the progeny of male mice in males caught in 1987 in the area with maximal contamination. The frequency of mice heterozygous for recessive lethal mutations decreased with time after the accident.
- Published
- 1997
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