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Journal of craniofacial genetics and developmental biology 1986

Exencephaly and axial skeletal dysmorphogenesis induced by maternal exposure to cadmium in the mouse.

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R Padmanabhan
M S Hameed

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Abstract

To investigate the axial skeletal dysmorphogenesis associated with exencephaly and facial abnormalities, two doses of cadmium chloride (4 mg/kg and 6 mg/kg) were administered subcutaneously to MF1 mice on day 7 of gestation (sperm-positive day = day 0). Fetuses were collected on day 18. Gross examination revealed a very high incidence of cranioschisis aperta with exencephaly, maxillary and mandibular hypoplasia, low-set microtia, edema, and growth retardation of fetuses in both treatment groups. Alizarin red S-stained and cleared skeletal preparations of these embryos revealed hypoplasia of the premaxilla, maxilla, nasal bone, zygoma, and mandible of the facial skeleton. The orbital plate represented the frontal bone. The vault of the skull was conspicuously absent. In cranioschisis, the exoccipitals had splayed and fused with the atlas. The basicranial bones were hypoplastic and crowded, thus reducing the cranial cavity. The vertebral bodies were more affected than the arches. Hemivertebrae and longitudinal fusion of centra and arches were also noted. The ribs were usually rudimentary. Agenesis, fusion, and forking of ribs were frequently observed. The sternebrae were rudimentary, bipartite, or longitudinally fused. These data clearly establish the association between neural tube and axial mesodermal abnormalities and emphasize the interdependence of the neurectoderm and mesoderm in normal morphogenesis.

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