Faculty Articles

Impact of Maternal Lifestyle Factors on Newborn HPRT Mutant Frequencies and Molecular Spectrum—Initial Results from the Prenatal Exposures and Preeclampsia Prevention (PEPP) Study

Publication Title

Mutation Research

ISSN

0027-5107

Publication Date

12-1-1999

Abstract

Epidemiological studies have demonstrated associations between maternal tobacco smoke exposure and consumption of alcohol during pregnancy and increased risk of pediatric malignancies, particularly infant leukemias. Molecular evidence also suggests that somatic mutational events occurring during fetal hematopoiesis in utero can contribute to this process. As part of an ongoing multi-endpoint biomarker study of 2000 mothers and newborns, the HPRT T-lymphocyte cloning assay was used to determine mutant frequencies (Mf) in umbilical cord blood samples from an initial group of 60 neonates born to a sociodemographically diverse cohort of mothers characterized with respect to age, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and cigarette smoke and alcohol exposure. Non-zero Mf (N=47) ranged from 0.19 to 5.62×10−6, median 0.70×10−6, mean±SD 0.98±0.95×10−6. No significant difference in Mf was observed between female and male newborns. Multivariable Poisson regression analysis revealed that increased HPRT Mf were significantly associated with maternal consumption of alcohol at the beginning [Relative Rate (RR)=1.84, 95% CI=0.99–3.40, P=0.052) and during pregnancy (RR=2.99, 95% CI=1.14–7.84, P=0.026). No independent effect of self-reported active maternal cigarette smoking, either at the beginning or throughout pregnancy, nor maternal passive exposure to cigarette smoke was observed. Although based on limited initial data, this is the first report of a positive association between maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy and HPRT Mf in human newborns. In addition, the spectrum of mutations at the HPRT locus was determined in 33 mutant clones derived from 19 newborns of mothers with no self-reported exposure to tobacco smoke and 14 newborns of mothers exposed passively or actively to cigarette smoke. In the unexposed group, alterations leading to specific exon 2–3 deletions, presumably as a result of illegitimate V(D)J recombinase activity, were found in five of the 19 mutants (26.3%); in the passively exposed group, two exon 2–3 deletions were present among the seven mutants (28.6%); and in the actively exposed group, six of the seven mutants (85.7%) were exon 2–3 deletions. Although no overall increase in HPRT Mf was observed and the number of mutant clones examined was small, these initial results point to an increase in V(D)J recombinase-associated HPRT gene exon 2–3 deletions in cord blood T-lymphocytes in newborns of actively smoking mothers relative to unexposed mothers (P=0.011). Together, these results add to growing molecular evidence that in utero exposures to genotoxicants result in detectable transplacental mutagenic effects in human newborns.

DOI

10.1016/S0027-5107(99)00172-4

Volume

431

Issue

2

Disciplines

Medical Specialties | Medicine and Health Sciences | Osteopathic Medicine and Osteopathy

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