| Literature DB >> 26155200 |
Abstract
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) is a multifactorial disorder with many different putative influences mediating disease onset, severity, progression and diminution. Spontaneous natural IBD is classically expressed as Crohn's Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC) commonly found in primates; lymphoplasmocytic enteritis, eosinophilic gastritis and colitis, and ulcerative colitis with neuronal hyperplasia in dogs; and colitis in horses. Spontaneous inflammatory bowel disease has been noted in a number of rodent models which differ in genetic strain background, induced mutation, microbiota influences and immunopathogenic pathways. Histological lesions in Crohn's Disease feature noncaseating granulomatous inflammation while UC lesions typically exhibit ulceration, lamina propria inflammatory infiltrates and lack of granuloma development. Intestinal inflammation caused by CD and UC is also associated with increased incidence of intestinal neoplasia. Transgenic murine models have determined underlying etiological influences and appropriate therapeutic targets in IBD. This literature review will discuss current opinion and findings in spontaneous IBD, highlight selected transgenic rodent models of IBD and discuss their respective pathogenic mechanisms. It is very important to provide accommodation of induced putative deficits in activities of daily living and to assess discomfort and pain levels in the face of significant morbidity and/or mortality in these models. Epigenetic, environmental (microbiome, metabolome) and nutritional factors are important in IBD pathogenesis, and evaluating ways in which they influence disease expression represent potential investigative approaches with the greatest potential for new discoveries.Entities:
Keywords: IBD; Transgenic rodent models; intestinal microbiota
Year: 2015 PMID: 26155200 PMCID: PMC4490147 DOI: 10.5625/lar.2015.31.2.47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lab Anim Res ISSN: 1738-6055
Selected spontaneous and transgenic rodent IBD models
| Mouse Nomenclature | Genetic Modification | Resultant Pathophysiologic Outcome | Clinical Disease | Pathologic Disease Expression | LAR Health Status require for IBD expression |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITF-dnRII1 | Overexpression of the dominant-negative TGFβ type II receptor | Functional inactivation of TGFβRII protein expression | Weight loss, diarrhea, hematochezia, anal / rectal prolapse | Severe ulcerative mucosal ulceration; severe inflammation | Specific Pathogen Free + Dextran Sodium Sulfate |
| Smad-32 | Deficient in TGFβ signaling molecule smad3 | Disruption of exon 2, | Diminished size, diarrhea, gastric and deeply invasive colorectal tumors | Colonic epithelial crypt herniation, chronic - active repair, colonic neoplasia | Specific pathogen free |
| dnKO3 | Dominant negative TGFβRII mice crossed with class II cytokine receptor family member 2 | Deficient in TGFβRII and cytokine receptor family member; null mutants for IL10RII | Failure to thrive, rapid weight loss and early mortality | Severe UC with Focal ulceration, mucosal thickening in the cecum, descending colon and rectum; mild ascending colonic change with minimal inflammation; severe mucosal inflammation with mixed infiltrates | |
| TNFΔARE 4 | Deletion ARE 3'UTR regulatory element for tumor necrosis factor | Loss of posttranscriptional regulation for TNF type I or II receptors | Severe weight loss, early disease onset by D10 postnatal and mortality by 5 weeks; inflammatory polyarthritis and CD bowel disease | Ileitis with minimal colonic involvement; consistent with Th-1 cytokine activation pattern expression | |
| T/I mice- (B6.129S6-Tnftm1Gkl/J) (Tnf+/-Il10-/- [T-het/I] and Tnf-/-Il10-/-/J)5 | IL-10-/- KO crossed with knockout TNF-deficient KO | Deficient in IL10 and TNF resulting in mucosal compromise and increased inflammation | Spontaneous colonic tumors immediately after weaning | UC-linear continuous inflammation of the terminal colon and rectum after 15 weeks of age. Neutrophilic lamina propria infiltrates, crypt abscesses and mucosal ulceration; colonic cancer various phenotypes | Specific pathogen free; phenotype prevented by exogenous treatment with drug cocktail consisting of amoxicillin, clarithromycin, metronidazole antibiotics and omeprazole acid suppression agent |
| SAMP1, SAMP1/Yit/Fc TG mice6 | STAT3 activation and inflammation | Early activation of Th1 mediated pathways; mucosa immunity dysbiosis; recent suggestion of Th2 activation also | Diarrhea | UC-spontaneous ileitis with skip lesions, mixed chronic active inflammation infiltrates. G granulomatous inflammation at 10 weeks of age, 100 % penetrance by 30 weeks; severe bowel strictures mature adults in older than 40 weeks of age CD-spontaneous gastritis and autoimmune hepatitis | Specific pathogen free |
| Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASP) deficient Tg mice7 | Deletion of WASP sequence | Absence of WASP expression in hematopoietic cells with lack of integration between surface receptor and actin cytoskeleton signaling networks | Weight loss, diarrhea, rectal prolapse; include lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, cytoskeletal abnormalities; T cell signaling defects and l quantity; early mortality by 3 months; 100 % penetrance by 6 months in surviving mice | Mixed cell infiltrates in colonic lamina propria; crypt abscesses, absence of granulomas; increased cytokine expression and abnormal Treg number and activity | |
| HLA-B27 Tg rat8 | Multiple inserted integrated, HLA-B27 gene; multiple Tg rat strain constructs | HLA protein misfolding promotes inflammation | Diarrhea by 10 weeks of age followed by peripheral arthritis; spondyloarthropathies with multifocal severe arthritis; severe inflammation of the bowel, bone, joints and skin | CD: Marked inflammation in epithelium of the stomach, large and small intestine | Requires conventional health status management for disease expression |
| UC-mucosal ulceration; Th1 cytokine expression | |||||
| NOD2 Tg mice9 | Deletion of exons 1, 3, and a frameshift deletion | Deficiency of intracellular receptor for bacterial wall component muramyl dipeptide; altered TLR2 expression; deficient NOD expression; loss of mucosal barrier function | Increased susceptibility to infection | Model severity is increased with specific pathogen free or gnotobiotic health status; associated with administration of dextran sodium sulfate; | |
| NF-κB essential modulator (NEMO) Tg mice10 | Loss of regulation for intestinal homeostatic growth, inflammation and tight junctional permeability | In some | Massive apoptosis in the liver; in Ikk1/mice, skeletal defects, thickening of the skin and impaired limb outgrowth, but normal liver development | ||
| Deficiency of STAT5 and increased NF-κB activation | Deficient maintenance of zonula occulens protein: cytoskeletal junctional stability; loss of colonic barrier function | Rectal bleeding, shortened colon, slow weight gain, stool quality that was soft to frank diarrhea | Severe ileitis and colitis due to persistent barrier dysfunction and impairment of mucosal wound healing Requires dextran sodium sulfate for model expression | ||
| IKK-NEMO/IKKαβ10,12 | Double knockout with conditional targeting of the NRMO regulatory complex governing NFκB signaling | Defective TGFβRII and IL10RII; overactive T cell populations | Diarrhea and weight loss | UC and CD: Severe chronic fulminant ulcerative pancolitis | Completely reversible with broad spectrum antibiotics |
| K8-/- keratin TG mice 13 | Several Tg constructs available; | Defective intermediate filament class keratin 8, 18 and 19 expression; Defective TNFRII-mediated and TNF-induced transcription factor signaling and activation; mistargeted protein translocation; abnormal intestinal microbiota growth rates and species distribution | Diarrhea; abnormal Cl- transport | Colonic inflammation; epithelial marker expression relocated from basal crypts to apical and lateral locations | |
| Human IBD associated with abnormal intermediate filament expression for keratins 8, 18 and 19 | |||||
| XBP-1 Tg mice14 | Defective UPR and partial Xbp1 deficiency in the colon | Develop abnormal unfolded protein during intestinal inflammation | Suppressed colitis development; paneth and goblet cell apoptosis, spontaneous ileal inflammation; MGUS and multiple myeloma Increased sensitivity to dextran sodium sulfate colitis induction | ||
| Ire1β-/- KO mice15 | No cleavage of Xbpr mRNA | Loss of the Ire1β UPR endonuclease | No spontaneous intestinal inflammation | ||
| Increased sensitivity to dextran sodium sulfate colitis induction | |||||
| Conditional allele or inducible knockout mice for expression of a the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) | Loss of intermolecular disulfide bond formation reduction for correction of misfolded proteins prior to removal; Deficient Muc2 biosynthesis | Rectal prolapse; diarrhea, weight loss and hematochezia with colitis induction | Lack of mucus production in the intestine; paneth and goblet cell apoptosis Endoplasmic reticular stress; Inducible and germline KO mice: spontaneous severe terminal ileitis and colitis with neutrophillic and granulomatous responses | ||
| BIN Tg mice17 | Ablate BIN1 sequence | Protective effect-no clinical signs with use of physiological stressors | No histopathological changes noted Increased functional resistance to dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis | ||
| IL23p19 KO and Il12p35 KO mice18 | Ablate cytokine sequence | Variation in T cell populations and cytokine release patterns | Modified immunoreaction to enteric commensal bacterial populations and mucosal epithelial defense | ||
| STAT3 deficiency Tg mice19 | Ablate STAT3 sequence | STAT3 deficiency; nonspecific transcription factor that opposes cytokine expression and induces IL23R expression and Th17 differentiation. | Severe dehydration, lethargy, weight loss, diarrhea, anal bleeding and prolapse by day 11; Severe mixed inflammatory infiltrate in multiple sites; colon enlargement, hematochezia and diarrhea | Responsive to polyI:polyC Immunostimulant treatment: clinical wasting syndrome with severe fatal enterocolitis within 2 to 3 weeks after treatment | |
| -Inflammatory Response is obliterated by neutralizing anti-p40 antibodies | |||||
| IL10-/- and TCRα-/- Tg mice20 | Multiple constructs. Deficient in IL10 and TCRá sequence; alternative strain construction available for IL10 and TCRβ | Variable phenotype depending on construct; IL10-/- when expressed on 129/SvEv, BALB/c, and C3H/HeJBir backgrounds exhibit increased IBD phenotypical susceptibility | UC-TCRα-/- mice exhibit mucosal inflammation andTh2 associated immunoreactivity at 12 weeks of age | Spontaneous intestinal inflammation with STAT3 present in circulating macrophages | Limited IL10-/- and/or TCRα-/- model disease expression when maintained under germ free or defined enteric commensal conditions |
| CD: IL10-/- mice exhibit chronic enterocolitis and Th1 associated immunoreactivity | |||||
| Non Obese Diabetic (NOD) based | Many constructs available. | Rectal prolapse; Absence of diabetes mellitus and decreased sialodacryadenitis | Conventional facility health status management |
References to each model are as follows: 1[515253]. 2http://jaxmice.jax.org/strain/003451.html; 3[54]; 4[56]; 5http:/jaxmice.jax.org/strain/003008.html; 6[616287]; 7[5065]; 8[68]; 9[33]; 10[264588]; 11[26]; 12[54]; 13[71]; 14[3368]; 15[68], http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE6980; 16[6872], http://jaxmice.jax.org/strain/025630.html;17[77]; 18[33]; 19[74578]; 20[84559], http://jaxmice.jax.org/list/ra1655.html, http://jaxmice.jax.org/jaxnotes/502/502a.html; 21[859]