| Literature DB >> 21994638 |
Christina L Hutson1, Inger K Damon.
Abstract
An ideal animal model for the study of a human disease is one which utilizes a route of infection that mimics the natural transmission of the pathogen; the ability to obtain disease with an infectious dose equivalent to that causing disease in humans; as well having a disease course, morbidity and mortality similar to that seen with human disease. Additionally, the animal model should have a mode(s) of transmission that mimics human cases. The development of small animal models for the study of monkeypox virus (MPXV) has been quite extensive for the relatively short period of time this pathogen has been known, although only a few of these models have been used to study anti-poxvirus agents. We will review those MPXV small animal models that have been developed thus far for the study of therapeutic agents.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; monkeypox; therapeutics
Year: 2010 PMID: 21994638 PMCID: PMC3185589 DOI: 10.3390/v2122763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Animal models using monkeypox virus (MPXV) as a challenge
| Guinea pigs [ | Outbred | Medium | WA | Intracardiac, IN, oral or FP | Not provided | NA | No rash | NA | 0 | NA |
| Golden hamsters [ | Outbred | Medium | WA | Intracardiac, oral, IN, scarified skin | 1.5–5.9 × 107 | NA | No rash | NA | 0 | NA |
| Adult rabbits [ | Outbred | High | WA | IV | 107 | 5–6 | Extensive disseminated rash | __ | 8 | One animal died one month post infection due to cachexia |
| Scarified skin/intradermal | 105 | Not provided | Localized lesion in addition to disseminated rash for some animals | NA | 0 | NA | ||||
| Oral | >109 | NA | No rash | NA | 0 | NA | ||||
| 10 day old rabbits [ | Outbred | High | WA | Oral | 106 | 4–6 | Disseminated rash | __ | 85 | 4–14 days |
| IN | 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 83 | 4–5 days | ||||
| Adult white rats [ | Outbred | Medium | WA | IV, IN, cutaneous | 101 to 103 | NA | No rash | NA | 0 | NA |
| 1–3 day old white rats [ | Outbred | Medium | WA | IN | 101 to 103 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | 5–6 days |
| Cotton rats [ | Outbred | Medium | WA | IV | 105 | Not provided | Not provided | __ | 100 | 4–5 days |
| IN | 105 | Not provided | Not provided | __ | 50 | 4–5 days | ||||
| Multimammate rats [ | Outbred | Low | WA | IN, IP | Not provided | Not provided | Not provided | __ | Not provided | Not provided |
| Common squirrel [ | Outbred | Low | CB | IN, oral, scarification | 106 | 1–5 | No rash | __ | 100 | 7–8 days |
| African squirrels (six species) [ | Outbred | Low | CB | IN | 105, 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | Not provided |
| 10–104 | 16–25 until rash | Rash on non- fur-bearing areas of skin in a few squirrels | __ | Varied based on squirrel species | Not provided | |||||
| Oral | 105 | 16–25 until rash | Rash on non- fur-bearing areas of skin in a few squirrels | __ | Not provided | Not provided | ||||
| Cutaneous | 105 | Not provided | Localized lesion at inoculation site | __ | Not provided | Not provided | ||||
| Ground squirrel [ | Outbred | Low | WA | IP, IN | 105.1 | 4–5 | No rash | __ | 100 | IP: 6–7 days |
| WA, CB | Subcutaneous | 100 | 3–5 | No rash | 0.35 pfu CB | 100 | 6–11 days | |||
| Prairie dogs [ | Outbred | Low | WA | IP | 105.1 | 4 | No rash | __ | 100 | 8–11 days |
| IN | 105.1 | 4 | Lesions on lips/tongue | __ | 60 | 11–14 days | ||||
| WA, CB | IN | 104.5 | 9–12 days until rash | Disseminated rash | WA: 1.29 × 105 pfu | WA: 0 | CB: 13 days | |||
| Scarification | 104.5 | 9–12 days until rash | Disseminated rash | __ | WA: 0 | CB: 11–12 days | ||||
| 8 day old white mice [ | Not specified | High | WA | FP | 6 × 102 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | Not provided |
| IP | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | Not provided | ||||
| IN | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | Not provided | ||||
| ID | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 50 | Not provided | ||||
| Oral | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 40 | Not provided | ||||
| 12 day old white mice [ | Not specified | High | WA | Oral | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 14 | Not provided |
| 15 day old white mice [ | Not specified | High | WA | IN | 1.2 × 106 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 100 | Not provided |
| BALB/c and C57BL/6 lab mice [ | Inbred | High | WA, CB | IN, FP | 105 | 6 | No rash | NA | 0 | NA |
| SCID BALB/c lab mice [ | Inbred | High | WA, CB | IP | 105 | 5–7 | No rash | __ | 100 | 9–11 days |
| C57BL/6stat-/- lab mice [ | Inbred | High | CB | IN | 47 | No symptoms except weight loss | No rash | Females: 213 pfu | 25–50 | 12–21 days |
| 4700 | No symptoms except weight loss | No rash | Females: 213 pfu | 100 | 9 days | |||||
| CAST/EiJ wild-derived lab mice [ | Inbred | High | CB | IN | 104 | Not provided | No rash | 680 pfu | 100 | 8–10 days |
| IP | 103 | Not provided | No rash | 14 pfu | 100 | 6–8 days | ||||
| WA | IN | 104 | Not provided | No rash | 7600 pfu | 50 | 9 days | |||
| Dormice [ | Outbred | Low | CB | FP | 1.4 × 104 | Not provided | No rash | __ | 92 | 7–10 days |
| IN | 2 | 3 | No rash | 12 pfu | 38 | 12.3 ± 5 days | ||||
| IN | 200–2000 | 3 days | No rash | 12 pfu | 100 | 7.9 ± 1 and 8.7 ± 1 |