Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where L.A. Hughes is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by L.A. Hughes.


Mutation Research | 1987

Exposure of female mice to ethylene oxide within hours after mating leads to fetal malformation and death

W.M. Generoso; J.C. Rutledge; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; P.W. Braden

When previously mated female mice were exposed to inhaled ethylene oxide at the time of fertilization of their eggs or during early pronuclear stage of the zygote (before DNA synthesis), a high incidence of mortality among conceptuses and of congenital abnormalities among both the dead and the surviving fetuses was observed. The developmental stage at which death occurred ranged from near the time of implantation to day 17 of gestation when examination of the uterine contents was performed. In comparison, midgestation and late fetal deaths were absent or minimal when the females were exposed either before mating or when conceptuses were in later zygotic stages (pronuclear DNA synthesis) or had reached the early two-cell stage. The random types of congenital abnormality observed and the remarkable stage-dependent sensitivity suggest a genetic basis for the response. The effects differ, both from genetic damages induced in premating germ cells, which lead only to death near the time of implantation, and from teratogenic damage, which leads to malformations only when exposure of embryos occurs during the period of major organogenesis.


Mutation Research | 1988

Mutagen-induced fetal anomalies and death following treatment of females within hours after mating

W.M. Generoso; J.C. Rutledge; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; D.J. Downing

In an earlier study (Generoso et al., 1987), it was observed that the mutagen, ethylene oxide (EtO), produced remarkable increases in the incidence of developmental abnormalities and death of fetuses when early zygotic stages were exposed. This is a major finding in experimental induction of embryopathy, implicating genetic damage to the zygotes as the likely cause. In the subsequent study reported here, 3 other mutagens — ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), ethyl nitrosourea (ENU), and triethylene melamine (TEM), were studied for embryopathic effects following exposure of dictyate oocytes, prefertilization oviducal eggs and sperm, early pronuclear zygotes, zygotes undergoing pronuclear DNA synthesis, and two-cell embryos. All 4 mutagens produced developmental abnormalities among living fetuses following exposure of early pronuclear zygotes (the only stage studied for this endpoint in this report). With respect to stage specificity and gestational timing of death of conceptuses, EMS and EtO on one hand and ENU and TEM on the other, are very similar to one another. EMS, like EtO, produced a high incidence of midgestation and late fetal deaths only in prefertilization oviducal eggs and sperm and in early pronuclear eggs. In contrast, ENU and TEM produced high losses of conceptuses in all postmating stages studied but death occurred primarily prior to or around the time of implantation. Thus, the frequency of induction and the expression of embryopathy, which ranged from early embryonic preimplantation and late fetal deaths to subtle fetal anomalies, are dependent upon the stage exposed and the mutagen used.


Mutation Research | 1990

Female-specific dominant lethal effects in mice

M. Katoh; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; L.B. Foxworth; Jack B. Bishop; W.M. Generoso

For some chemicals, induction of presumed dominant lethal mutations has been observed only in female mice and not in males. In those cases, questions arise as to (1) whether the increased embryonic mortality is due to genetic effects of the chemicals in the oocyte or, (2) is caused indirectly through maternal toxicity, and, if genetic, (3) the basis for the sex difference. These questions were studied using the compounds adriamycin and platinol. Neither compound induces dominant lethals in male germ cells, but both increased early embryonic mortality when females were treated prior to mating (treatment of maturing oocytes). Reciprocal zygote transfer experiments ruled out, either entirely or for the large part, maternal toxicity as the cause, and cytogenetic analysis of first-cleavage metaphases revealed high incidences of chromosomal aberrations. The results of both of these experiments thus provide evidence that the early embryonic mortality resulted from genetic effects induced in oocytes. Most interestingly, each compound produced unexpected types of chromosomal aberrations. Adriamycin produced deletions, rings, and presumed chromosome-type rearrangements. Platinol, on the other hand, produced a few chromatid-type aberrations, but the bulk of aberrations were characterized by disorganization of the chromatin, minute fragments, and thread-like chromatin bridges between fragments and chromosomes or between two or more chromosomes. The latter type of cytogenetic damage was observed primarily in the centromeric region. It is hypothesized that the female-specific dominant lethal effects of the two compounds are associated with the diffused state of the maturing oocyte chromosomes.


Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1996

Dominant lethal mutations, heritable translocations, and unscheduled DNA synthesis induced in male mouse germ cells by glycidamide, a metabolite of acrylamide

W.M. Generoso; Gary A. Sega; A.M. Lockhart; L.A. Hughes; K.T. Cain; N.L.A. Cacheiro; Michael D. Shelby

The hypothesis that acrylamide induces dominant lethal mutations and heritable translocations in male mice, not through direct adduction, but by conversion to the reactive epoxide, glycidamide, was investigated. Three studies, namely, induction of dominant lethal mutations, heritable translocations, and unscheduled DNA synthesis in spermatids, which were conducted earlier in this laboratory for acrylamide, were also performed for glycidamide to determine its mutagenic properties and to compare responses. Results of these studies are consistent with the proposal that in vivo conversion to glycidamide is responsible for the mutagenicity of acrylamide in male mice.


BMC Genomics | 2005

Efficient gene-driven germ-line point mutagenesis of C57BL/6J mice

Edward J. Michaud; Cymbeline T. Culiat; Mitchell L Klebig; Paul E Barker; K.T. Cain; Debra J Carpenter; Lori L Easter; Carmen M. Foster; Alysyn W Gardner; Zhishan Guo; Kay J Houser; L.A. Hughes; Marilyn K. Kerley; Zhaowei Liu; Robert E. Olszewski; Irina Pinn; Ginger D Shaw; Sarah G. Shinpock; Ann M. Wymore; Eugene M. Rinchik; Dabney K. Johnson

BackgroundAnalysis of an allelic series of point mutations in a gene, generated by N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) mutagenesis, is a valuable method for discovering the full scope of its biological function. Here we present an efficient gene-driven approach for identifying ENU-induced point mutations in any gene in C57BL/6J mice. The advantage of such an approach is that it allows one to select any gene of interest in the mouse genome and to go directly from DNA sequence to mutant mice.ResultsWe produced the Cryopreserved Mutant Mouse Bank (CMMB), which is an archive of DNA, cDNA, tissues, and sperm from 4,000 G1 male offspring of ENU-treated C57BL/6J males mated to untreated C57BL/6J females. Each mouse in the CMMB carries a large number of random heterozygous point mutations throughout the genome. High-throughput Temperature Gradient Capillary Electrophoresis (TGCE) was employed to perform a 32-Mbp sequence-driven screen for mutations in 38 PCR amplicons from 11 genes in DNA and/or cDNA from the CMMB mice. DNA sequence analysis of heteroduplex-forming amplicons identified by TGCE revealed 22 mutations in 10 genes for an overall mutation frequency of 1 in 1.45 Mbp. All 22 mutations are single base pair substitutions, and nine of them (41%) result in nonconservative amino acid substitutions. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) of cryopreserved spermatozoa into B6D2F1 or C57BL/6J ova was used to recover mutant mice for nine of the mutations to date.ConclusionsThe inbred C57BL/6J CMMB, together with TGCE mutation screening and ICSI for the recovery of mutant mice, represents a valuable gene-driven approach for the functional annotation of the mammalian genome and for the generation of mouse models of human genetic diseases. The ability of ENU to induce mutations that cause various types of changes in proteins will provide additional insights into the functions of mammalian proteins that may not be detectable by knockout mutations.


Mutation Research | 1989

Chromosome malsegregation and embryonic lethality induced by treatment of normally ovulated mouse oocytes with nocodazole

W.M. Generoso; M. Katoh; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; L.B. Foxworth; T.J. Mitchell; Jack B. Bishop

The mouse egg is ovulated with its nucleus arrested at the metaphase-II stage of meiosis. Sperm entry triggers the completion of the second meiotic division. It has been speculated that damage to the meiotic spindle of normally ovulated eggs at around the time of sperm entry could result in chromosome malsegregation and the death of conceptuses with numerical chromosome anomalies. This hypothesis was tested using nocodazole, a microtubule inhibitor. Nocodazole was administered either to maturing preovulatory oocytes or to normally ovulated eggs at one of the following stages: (1) the time of sperm entry, (2) early pronuclear stage, (3) pronuclear DNA synthesis, (4) prior to first cleavage division, (5) early 2-cell stage, or (6) prior to the second cleavage division. Little or no effect was observed for treatment times other than the time of sperm entry, when the egg is being activated to complete the second meiotic division. Remarkably high frequencies of embryonic lethality, expressed at around the time of implantation, were induced at this stage. Cytogenetic analysis of first cleavage metaphases of zygotes treated at the time of sperm entry revealed a high incidence of varied numerical chromosome anomalies, with changes in ploidy being predominant.


Toxicological Sciences | 1992

Acrylamide: Dermal Exposure Produces Genetic Damage in Male Mouse Germ Cells

Gustavo Gutiérrez-Espeleta; L.A. Hughes; Walter W. Piegorsch; Michael D. Shelby; W.M. Generoso

Acrylamide is used extensively in sewage and wastewater treatment plants, in the paper and pulp industry, in treatment of potable water, and in research laboratories for chromatography, electrophoresis, and electron microscopy. Dermal contact is a major route of human exposure. It has been shown that acrylamide is highly effective in breaking chromosomes of germ cells of male mice and rats when administered intraperitoneally or orally, resulting both in the early death of conceptuses and in the transmission of reciprocal translocations to live-born progeny. It is now reported that acrylamide is absorbed through the skin of male mice, reaches the germ cells, and induces chromosomal damage. The magnitude of genetic damage appears to be proportional to the dose administered topically.


Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1995

Dominant lethal and heritable translocation tests with chlorambucil and melphalan in male mice

W.M. Generoso; Kristine L. Witt; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; N.L.A. Cacheiro; Ann-Marie C. Lockhart; M.D. Shelby

Chemicals used in the treatment of cancer include several that are potent mutagens in a range of in vitro and in vivo assays. For some, genetic effects have also been demonstrated in humans, detected as chromosomal aberrations in peripheral lymphocytes. Because (1) many of these agents are confirmed mutagens, (2) humans are exposed to them in relatively high doses, and (3) an increasing number of early cancer victims are surviving to reproductive age, it is important that information be available on the genetic and reproductive hazards associated with exposure to these agents. Chlorambucil and melphalan are structurally related chemicals that are included in our efforts to identify and assess such hazards among cancer chemotherapy agents. To date, both have been reported to induce specific locus mutations in germ cells of male mice (Russell et al., 1989; Russel et al., 1992b) and melphalan is one of very few chemicals shown to induce such mutations in spermatogonial stem cells. More recently, both chemicals were found to have strong reproductive effects in female mice (Bishop and Generoso, 1995, in preparation). In the present studies, these chemicals were tested for the induction of dominant lethal mutations and heritable translocations in male mice. Both chemicals were found to have reproductive effects attributable to cytotoxicity in specific male germ cell stages and to induce dominant lethal mutations and heritable translocations in postmeiotic germ cells, particularly in mid to early stage spermatids. Thus, relatively extensive data are now available for assessing the genetic and reproductive hazards that may result from therapeutic exposures to these chemicals.


Mutation Research | 1986

Difference between two hybrid stocks of mice in the incidence of congenital abnormalities following X-ray exposure of stem-cell spermatogonia

J.C. Rutledge; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes; P.W. Braden; W.M. Generoso

Unbalanced (duplication/deficiency) sperm from balanced reciprocal translocations induced in spermatogonial stem cells of mice generally lead to embryonic lethality around the time of implantation. In a recent study (Generoso et al., 1985), it was found that the incidence of X-ray-induced embryonic lethality differed markedly between two hybrid stocks of irradiated male mice. A parallel difference in the frequencies of reciprocal translocations was observed cytologically in the meiocytes of irradiated males. In the present report, which is an adjunct to the study by Generoso et al. (1985), it was determined whether or not similar differences between the two stocks exist for congenital defects resulting from genetic damage to stem-cell spermatogonia. The results indicate not only an association between the frequencies of induced reciprocal translocations and congenital abnormalities, but also a parallel greater frequency of induced malformations in the (C3H X 101)F1 stock versus the (SEC X C57BL)F1 stock of males.


Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1985

Tests for dominant-lethal effects of 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane (DBCP) in male and female mice☆

W.M. Generoso; K.T. Cain; L.A. Hughes

DBCP was studied for dominant-lethal effects in male and female mice and for total reproductive effects in females. In males it was administered either intraperitoneally or subcutaneously while in females it was given only by the former route. No DBCP-related response was observed in either males or females indicating its ineffectiveness in inducing chromosomal aberrations or cytotoxicity in mouse germ cells. These findings differ markedly from the observations made in rats by other investigators. Thus, the probable existence of a species difference in germ cell response to DBCP has been strengthened by the availability of the present results. It should be noted, however, that only two stocks of male mice have been studied so far for dominant-lethal and germ cell cytotoxicity effects.

Collaboration


Dive into the L.A. Hughes's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W.M. Generoso

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

K.T. Cain

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N.L.A. Cacheiro

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P.W. Braden

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jack B. Bishop

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cymbeline T. Culiat

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dabney K. Johnson

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.C. Rutledge

Children's Medical Center of Dallas

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge