The cause of neural tube defects: Some experiments and a hypothesis

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Abstract

The mouse mutant curly-tail is an animal model for human neural tube defects (NTD). Around 60% spontaneously have NTD. It has been found that maternal administration of hydroxyurea, mitomycin C, or 5-fluorouracil on day 9 of pregnancy, that is, when the fetal neural tube is in the final stages of closure, leads to a significant reduction in the proportion of NTD (to 15 to 20%) in the offspring, while total litter size is unaffected. All these substances are inhibitors of DNA synthesis, yet are apparently beneficial to subjects predisposed to NTD. As a consequence, it is suggested that the underlying mechanism causing NTD in the mice, and also in man, is a basic metabolic defect in DNA synthesis which affects cell replication and results in abnormal morphogenesis of the neuraxis.

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APA

Seller, M. J. (1983). The cause of neural tube defects: Some experiments and a hypothesis. Journal of Medical Genetics, 20(3), 164–168. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.20.3.164

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