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Evolutionary Aspects of Animal Model Use in Infectious Disease Research Stefan Niewiesk, DVM, PhD, DECLAM Associate Professor Department of Veterinary Biosciences College of Veterinary Medicine The Ohio State University The MOUSE in research C57BL/6 2/3 of all mice used The MOUSE Model for Research C57BL/6 mice produce most of the data which form the basis for our understanding of biology and medicine “Mouse concept” Based on the fact that mice are the best studied model system in biomedical research everything has to be “mousified”. Evolutionary relatedness and animal models Animal model use is based on evolutionary similarity between species: • • • • Number and function of muscles and bones Similarity of organ systems Metabolism Pain perception Infectious Diseases drive Evolution “To put the matter rather figuratively, it is much easier for a mouse to get a set of genes which enable it to resist Bacillus typhimurium than a set which enables it to resist a cat”. • J.B.S. Haldane (1949). Disease and evolution. Supplement to La Ricerca Scientifica 19:68–76. Distribution of malaria and malarial-resistance genes in the Old World. The current distribution of endemic malaria (a) is paralleled by distributions of G6PD deficiency (b), sickle-cell anaemia (c) and thalassaemia (d) in Africa, Europe, Asia and Australasia. Balancing Selection in Human Evolution, Eric J Vallender,Welkin E Johnson, Wiley Online Library Zoonotic diseases • 20% of zoonotic diseases are from other primates which are 0.5% of all species • Transmission from animal to human, susceptibility or resistance specific for the pathogen and host • Co-evolution between host and pathogen Specificity of pathogen Wolfe et al, Nature Reviews, 447, 279, 2007 Human pathogens drive evolution in MICE???? “It makes sense for a mouse to get a set of genes which enable it to resist Bacillus typhimurium but why should it acquire resistance against human pathogens it has never met?” S. Niewiesk Animal Models for Infectious Disease Research Host – pathogen interaction: • Animal model needs to be susceptible to the pathogen under study in order to obtain meaningful data Immune response: • Key elements of the immune response have to be the same in animal model and human Of Mice and Not Men: Differences between Mouse and Human Immunology Javier Mestas and Christopher C. W. Hughes The Journal of Immunology, 2004, 172, 2731-2738 Respiratory Syncytial Virus • Pediatric population: 100,000 hospitalizations, 250 death per year • Adult population: repeated infections with bronchitis/tracheitis • Over 65 years of age: second most common viral cause of death, severe clinical disease Problem: RSV in the mouse • Challenge/clearance model • No virus replication in upper respiratory tract • Mouse: the epithelial lining of a bronchiole consists primarily of Clara cells • Human: unlike the mouse, this lining consists of ciliated, columnar, respiratory epithelial cells RSV infection in human versus mouse lung human Courtesy of J.L. Grieves and J. Durbin, NYU mouse Problem: RSV in the mouse • Challenge/clearance model • No virus replication in URT • In consequence: Vaccines work always well Antivirals work well Effect of vaccines and antivirals not predictive for more susceptible animal models/human Solution 1: natural pathogen Mouse pneumovirus Strains with different pathogenic potential Low dose of inoculum (100 to 300 pfu) Severe disease and inflammation Lethal depending on inoculum Pulmonary dysfunction for 3 to 4 weeks after infection • Not the “target virus”, differences in pathogenesis • • • • • Solution 2: mouse-adapted pathogen e.g. Influenza virus • Alpha 2,3-linked sialic acid (SA) on epithelium (human virus uses α-2,6-linked SA) • Preference of avian influenza strains • Mouse adaption of human strains necessary • Selection for high pathogenicity/letality • Lack of Mx proteins in cytoplasm Solution 3: mice transgenic for human receptor(s): Measles virus • Mice are susceptible to intracerebral infection • Mice are not susceptible to respiratory infection • MV uses human CD46 and CD150 as receptors • Transgenic mice expressing either CD46 or CD150 have been generated • Transgenes do not change susceptibility Cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) Inbred animals Commercially available About 350 genes sequenced Cytokines, chemokines and antibodies available from R&D Systems Monoclonal antibodies produced by Niewiesk lab, large collection of cross-reactive antibodies Susceptible to human pathogens: Measles virus, respiratory syncytial virus, human parainfluenza virus type 3, human metapneumovirus, adenovirus, influenza virus and others Staphylococcus aureus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis Susceptible to infection but not immune deficient • Broncho-alveolar lymphoid tissue: rare • Neutrophils in blood: high • Lymphocytes in blood: low RSV infection in nose and lung Cotton rat human Courtesy of J.L. Grieves and J. Durbin, NYU mouse Virus replication at different ages Age-dependent replication of respiratory syncytial virus in the cotton rat Curtis SJ, Ottolini MG, Porter DD, Prince GA. Exp Biol Med. 2002; 227:799-802. Comparison of B cell activation after RSV infection in 6 to 8 week or 10 to 12 month old cotton rats Bone marrow *** p < 0.001, ANOVA (Analysis of Variance) Similarities between humans and cotton rats • • • • • • • Epithelium in lung (versus mouse) Influenza virus receptor Mx proteins CD150 as measles virus receptor Nitric oxide production by macrophages low TLR-9 expression levels low Hsp70 in tissue Evolutionary Aspects of Animal Model Use in Infectious Disease Research Evolution has not played a major role in shaping rodent models Host susceptibility Immune system Real life application versus knowledge generation [email protected] http://vet.osu.edu/cotton-rats-animal-model