Trichloroacetonitrile (TCAN) is among a number of contaminants found in drinking water produced by reactions of chlorine with background organic material. Long-Evans rats were intubated with TCAN (0, 1, 7.5, 15, 35, 55 mg/kg) in a tricaprylin vehicle on gestation days 6-18. The highest dose tested (55 mg/kg) was lethal in 21% of the dams and produced 100% resorptions in two-thirds of the survivors. Only one maternal death was seen at the next-lower dose; however, fetal weight and viability were decreased in a dose-related manner. The percentage of embryolethality was 13.9% at the lowest dose and 78.4% at the high dose, with resorption of entire litters seen at 7.5 mg/kg and above. At all doses, cardiovascular (interventricular septal defect, levocardia, common carotid, and right-sided aortic arch and ductus arteriosus) and urogenital (hypoplastic, missing, misplaced and fused kidneys, and hypoplastic uterine horns) malformations were seen in the offspring. Frequency of these malformations was dose related, ranging from 8% to 35% at the 1.0- and 35-mg/kg doses, respectively. The incidence of total soft tissue malformations was statistically significant at 15 and 35 mg/kg. There were no significant treatment-related changes in the incidence of skeletal malformations. The no-effect dose was established by statistical analysis to be 1.0 mg/kg/day.
Cleft palate frequencies were studied in AJ and SW mice following either 1- or 2-day dosing schedules with the anxiolytic drug diazepam (DAZ). In all cases, mice were food and water deprived for 24 and 48 hours in the 1- and 2-day dosing schedules, respectively. High cleft palate frequencies in control mice of both strains resulting from 48-hour food and water deprivation (on days 13.5 and 14.5 of gestation) were reduced in mice deprived for 24 hours, indicating a stress related effect. Two-day dosing with DAZ (400 mg/kg) produced a net increase in cleft palate frequency in SW (33%) and AJ (18%) mice. Mice treated only on day 13.5 had reduced control and DAZ cleft palate frequencies, neither of which were significant. Clefting was significant but reduced following 1-day dosing on day 13/20 of gestation (13 days 20 hours) in SW mice (18%), whereas no clefting was seen in the AJ strain. This strain difference was shown not to be related to differences in developmental timing. Production of cleft palate seen in AJ mice after 2 days of dosing may be indicative of an interaction of DAZ with the stresses resulting from food and water deprivation. Genes of the major histocompatibility locus, H-2, have been shown to regulate cleft palate formation following glucocorticoid and phenytoin administration to mice. Despite pharmacological similarities between DAZ and phenytoin, comparison of cleft palate frequencies following administration of DAZ to various strains of mice of different H-2 haplotypes indicated that genes associated with the H-2 locus do not regulate DAZ-induced cleft palate in these strains.
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