| Literature DB >> 26814757 |
Boris Betz1,2, Bryan R Conway3.
Abstract
In the current review, we discuss limitations and recent advances in animal models of diabetic nephropathy (DN). As in human disease, genetic factors may determine disease severity with the murine FVB and DBA/2J strains being more susceptible to DN than C57BL/6J mice. On the black and tan, brachyuric (BTBR) background, leptin deficient (ob/ob) mice develop many of the pathological features of human DN. Hypertension synergises with hyperglycemia to promote nephropathy in rodents. Moderately hypertensive endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS(-/-)) deficient diabetic mice develop hyaline arteriosclerosis and nodular glomerulosclerosis and induction of renin-dependent hypertension in diabetic Cyp1a1mRen2 rats mimics moderately severe human DN. In addition, diabetic eNOS(-/-) mice and Cyp1a1mRen2 rats recapitulate many of the molecular pathways activated in the human diabetic kidney. However, no model exhibits all the features of human DN; therefore, researchers should consider biochemical, pathological, and transcriptomic data in selecting the most appropriate model to study their molecules and pathways of interest.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Diabetic nephropathy; Hypertension; Regression; Transcriptomics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26814757 PMCID: PMC4729785 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-015-0706-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Summary of commonly utilized animal models of diabetic kidney disease with brief description
| Genetic modification and strain | Description | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Models of diabetes | ||
| DBA/2J mice | T1DM, STZ injection induces diabetes on a strain susceptible for nephropathy | [ |
| Ove26 on FVB mice | T1DM, mutation in the calmodulin gene results in toxic accumulation of defective proteins in beta-cells (nephropathy can be further exacerbated by uninephrectomy) | [ |
| Akita (Ins2+/C96Y) on C57BL6 mice | T1DM, mutation in the insulin gene results in misfolding and toxic accumulation of insulin | [ |
| db/db mice (C57BLKS/FVB) | T2DM, inactivating mutation in the leptin receptor leading to hyperphagia and obesity | [ |
| ob/ob on BTBR mice | T2DM, leptin deficiency on a black and tan, brachyuric strain that is naturally insulin resistant | [ |
| MKR on FVB mice | T2DM, dysfunctional insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) in the skeletal muscle results in nonobese insulin resistance. Nephropathy may be exacerbated by uninephrectomy or high-fat diet | [ |
| fa/fa on Zucker rat | T2DM, hyperphagic and obese, due to missense mutation in the gene coding the leptin receptor | [ |
| OLETF rat | T2DM, hyperphagia and obese, in part due to a spontaneous mutation in cholecystokinin receptor-1 | [ |
| Goto Kakizaki rat | T2DM, polygenic, nonobese model with deficient insulin production and insulin resistance. Nephropathy may be exacerbated by diet-induced hypertension | [ |
| Specific genetic modifications to accelerate nephropathy | ||
| ApoE−/− on C57BL6 mice | T1DM, STZ-induced diabetes combined with hyperlipidemia due to lack of apolipoprotein E | [ |
| eNOS−/− on C57BL6 or db/db mice | Vascular dysfunction and hypertension induced by eNOS deficiency accelerate renal injury in either STZ-induced diabetes (T1DM) or when backcrossed to db/db mice (T2DM) | [ |
| TTRhRen on FVB mice | T1DM, hypertension induced by human renin overproduction combined with diabetes induced by STZ injection or OVE26 mutation | [ |
| Cyp1a1mRen2 on Fisher rat | T1DM, severe hypertension induced by renin overproduction synergises with STZ-induced diabetes | [ |
Refer to the text for a detailed description and characterization of the models
STZ streptozotocin, MKR MCK-KR-hIGF-IR mice, OLETF rat Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty rat, TTRhRen transgenic mice expressing active human renin in the liver
Fig. 1Schemata for discovery of novel therapeutic agents. 1, High-throughput, nonbiased “-omic” approaches have identified hundreds of molecules that are associated with the development of human diabetic nephropathy. 2, Whether these molecules could be targeted to slow progression of nephropathy may be determined using the most appropriate animal model for the specific research question. 3, Genetically modified rodents may offer mechanistic insight and suggest whether development of a therapy is warranted. 4, Pharmaceutical agents may be tested for efficacy and potential side effects. 5, Therapies that are successful in robust animal studies may be taken forward into clinical trials. 6, Samples and data from these trials may be “biobanked” to provide further mechanistic insight toward refining therapies