Marchetti F, Bishop J B, Lowe X, Generoso W M, Hozier J, Wyrobek A J
Biology and Biotechnology Research Program, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA 94550, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Mar 27;98(7):3952-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.061404598. Epub 2001 Mar 13.
Etoposide, a topoisomerase II inhibitor widely used in cancer therapy, is suspected of inducing secondary tumors and affecting the genetic constitution of germ cells. A better understanding of the potential heritable risk of etoposide is needed to provide sound genetic counseling to cancer patients treated with this drug in their reproductive years. We used a mouse model to investigate the effects of clinical doses of etoposide on the induction of chromosomal abnormalities in spermatocytes and their transmission to zygotes by using a combination of chromosome painting and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole staining. High frequencies of chromosomal aberrations were detected in spermatocytes within 64 h after treatment when over 30% of the metaphases analyzed had structural aberrations (P < 0.01). Significant increases in the percentages of zygotic metaphases with structural aberrations were found only for matings that sampled treated pachytene (28-fold, P < 0.0001) and preleptotene spermatocytes (13-fold, P < 0.001). Etoposide induced mostly acentric fragments and deletions, types of aberrations expected to result in embryonic lethality, because they represent loss of genetic material. Chromosomal exchanges were rare. Etoposide treatment of pachytene cells induced aneuploidy in both spermatocytes (18-fold, P < 0.01) and zygotes (8-fold, P < 0.05). We know of no other report of an agent for which paternal exposure leads to an increased incidence of aneuploidy in the offspring. Thus, we found that therapeutic doses of etoposide affect primarily meiotic germ cells, producing unstable structural aberrations and aneuploidy, effects that are transmitted to the progeny. This finding suggests that individuals who undergo chemotherapy with etoposide may be at a higher risk for abnormal reproductive outcomes especially within the 2 months after chemotherapy.
依托泊苷是一种广泛用于癌症治疗的拓扑异构酶II抑制剂,被怀疑会诱发继发性肿瘤并影响生殖细胞的基因构成。为了向在生育年龄接受这种药物治疗的癌症患者提供合理的遗传咨询,需要更好地了解依托泊苷潜在的遗传风险。我们使用小鼠模型,通过染色体描绘和4',6-二脒基-2-苯基吲哚染色相结合的方法,研究临床剂量的依托泊苷对精母细胞染色体异常诱导及其向受精卵传递的影响。治疗后64小时内,在精母细胞中检测到高频率的染色体畸变,分析的中期相中超过30%有结构畸变(P<0.01)。仅在对处理过的粗线期(28倍,P<0.0001)和前细线期精母细胞进行采样的交配中,发现有结构畸变的受精卵中期相百分比显著增加(13倍,P<0.001)。依托泊苷主要诱导无着丝粒片段和缺失,这些畸变类型预计会导致胚胎致死,因为它们代表遗传物质的丢失。染色体交换很少见。对粗线期细胞进行依托泊苷处理会导致精母细胞(18倍,P<0.01)和受精卵(8倍,P<0.05)中出现非整倍体。我们尚未知晓有其他关于父本接触某种物质会导致后代非整倍体发生率增加的报道。因此,我们发现治疗剂量的依托泊苷主要影响减数分裂生殖细胞,产生不稳定的结构畸变和非整倍体,这些影响会传递给后代。这一发现表明,接受依托泊苷化疗的个体可能面临更高的异常生殖结局风险,尤其是在化疗后的2个月内。