| Literature DB >> 22899950 |
Mohamed Eddouks1, Debprasad Chattopadhyay, Naoufel Ali Zeggwagh.
Abstract
Plants have been historically used for diabetes treatment and related anti-inflammatory activity throughout the world; few of them have been validated by scientific criteria. Recently, a large diversity of animal models has been developed for better understanding the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus and its underlying inflammatory mechanism and new drugs have been introduced in the market to treat this disease. The aim of this work is to review the available animal models of diabetes and anti-inflammatory activity along with some in vitro models which have been used as tools to investigate the mechanism of action of drugs with potential antidiabetic properties and related anti-inflammatory mechanism. At present, the rigorous procedures for evaluation of conventional antidiabetic medicines have rarely been applied to test raw plant materials used as traditional treatments for diabetes; and natural products, mainly derived from plants, have been tested in chemically induced diabetes model. This paper contributes to design new strategies for the development of novel antidiabetic drugs and its related inflammatory activity in order to treat this serious condition which represents a global public health problem.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22899950 PMCID: PMC3414199 DOI: 10.1155/2012/142087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Classification of type 2 diabetes models in animals.
| Model category | Type 2 diabetic models | |
|---|---|---|
| Obese | Nonobese | |
| (I) Spontaneous or genetically derived diabetic animals |
| Cohen diabetic rat, GK rat |
| KK mouse, KK/Ay mouse | ||
| NZO mouse | ||
| NONcNZO10 mouse | ||
| TSOD mouse, M16 mouse | ||
| Zucker fatty rat, ZDF rat | ||
| SHR/N-cp rat, JCR/LA-cp rat | ||
| OLETF rat | ||
| Obese rhesus monkey | ||
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| (II) Diet/nutrition induced diabetic animals | Sand rat | — |
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| (III) Chemically induced diabetic animals | GTG-treated obese mice | Low-dose ALX or STZ adult rats, mice, and so forth; |
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| (IV) Surgical diabetic animals | VMH lesioned dietary obese diabetic rat | Partial pancreatectomized animals, for example, dog, primate, pig, and rat |
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| (V) Transgenic/knock-out diabetic animals |
| Transgenic or knockout mice involving genes of insulin, insulin receptor, and its components of downstream |
| Uncoupling protein (UCP1) knock-out mouse | Insulin signaling, for example, IRS-1, IRS-2, GLUT-4, PTP-1B, and others | |
| PPAR-g tissue-specific knockout mouse | ||
| Glucokinase or GLUT 2 knockout mice | ||
| Human islet amyloid polypeptide (HIP) over expressed rat | ||
KK: Kuo Kondo; KK/Ay: yellow KK obese; VMH: ventromedial hypothalamus; ZDF: Zucker diabetic fatty; NZO: New Zealand obese; TSOD: Tsumara Suzuki obese diabetes; SHR/N-cp: spontaneously hypertensive rat/NIH-corpulent; JCR: James C Russel; OLETF: Otuska Long Evans Tokushima fatty; GTG: gold thioglucose; ALX: alloxan; STZ: streptozotocin; GLUT: glucose transporter; IRS: insulin receptor substrate; GK: Goto-Kakizaki; PPAR: peroxisome proliferator activated receptor; PTP: phosphotyrosine phosphatase; ALS: alloxan sensitive.
Advantages and disadvantages of different categories of type 2 diabetic animal models*.
| Model category | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| (I) Spontaneous diabetic animals | Development of type 2 diabetes is of spontaneous origin involving genetic factors, and the features resemble human type 2 diabetes | Highly inbred, homogenous and mostly monogenic. Inheritance and development is genetically determined, unlike heterogeneity of humans |
| Most inbred animal models are homogeneous and environmentally controlled, that allows easy genetic dissection | Limited availability and expensive. Mortality due to ketosis is high in animals with brittle pancreas (db/db, ZDF rat | |
| Variability of results is minimum and require small sample size | Require sophisticated maintenance | |
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| (II) Diet/nutrition induced diabetics | Develop diabetes with obesity due to over nutrition like diabesity syndrome of human | Mostly require long dietary treatment |
| Toxicity of chemicals on other vital organs can be avoided | No frank hyperglycaemia develops upon dietary treatment in normal animals and hence unsuitable for screening antidiabetic agents on circulating glucose parameters | |
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| (III) Chemical induced diabetic animals | Selective loss of pancreatic beta cells (alloxan/STZ) leaving alpha and delta cells intact | Hyperglycaemia develops by cytotoxic action on the beta cells, leads to insulin deficiency rather than insulin resistance |
| Residual insulin secretion help animals to live long without insulin treatment | Diabetes induced by chemicals is less stable and is reversible due to spontaneous regeneration of beta cells. Thus, care is required to assess beta cell function in long-term experiments | |
| Ketosis and mortality is relatively less | Chemically induced toxicity on other organs along with its cytotoxic action on beta cells | |
| Comparatively cheaper, easier to develop and maintain | Variability of results on development of hyperglycaemia is high | |
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| (IV) Surgical diabetic animals | Avoids cytotoxic effects of chemical diabetogenes on other organes | Involvement of cumbersome technical and post operative procedures |
| Resembles human type 2 diabetes due to reduced islet beta cell mass | Occurrence of some digestive problems, due to excision of exocrine portion leads to the deficiency of amylase | |
| Dissection of alpha cells (secreting glucagon) along with beta cells leads to the counter regulatory response to hypoglycaemia | ||
| Mortality is comparatively higher | ||
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| (V) Transgenic/knock out diabetic animals |
| Highly sophisticated and costly for production and maintenance |
| Dissection of complex genetics of type 2 diabetes is easier | Expensive for regular screening experiments | |
*After [40].
The doses of two chemical diabetogenes in different species.
| Chemicals | Species | Dose (s) in mg/kg |
|---|---|---|
| Alloxan | Rat | 40–200 (i.v./i.p.) |
| Mice | 50–200 (i.v./i.p.) | |
| Rabbit | 100–150 (i.v.) | |
| Dog | 50–75 (i.v.) | |
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| Streptozotocin | Rat | 35–65 (i.v./i.p.) |
| Mice | 100–200 (i.v./i.p.) | |
| Hamster | 50 (i.p.) | |
| Dog | 20–30 (i.v.) | |
| Pig | 100–150 (i.v.) | |
| Primates | 50–150 (i.v.) | |
i.v.: intravenous; i.p.: intraperitoneal.
After [40].