| Literature DB >> 28804709 |
Jun Tashiro1, Gustavo A Rubio1, Andrew H Limper2, Kurt Williams3, Sharon J Elliot1, Ioanna Ninou4, Vassilis Aidinis4, Argyrios Tzouvelekis4, Marilyn K Glassberg1,5.
Abstract
Large multicenter clinical trials have led to two recently approved drugs for patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF); yet, both of these therapies only slow disease progression and do not provide a definitive cure. Traditionally, preclinical trials have utilized mouse models of bleomycin (BLM)-induced pulmonary fibrosis-though several limitations prevent direct translation to human IPF. Spontaneous pulmonary fibrosis occurs in other animal species, including dogs, horses, donkeys, and cats. While the fibrotic lungs of these animals share many characteristics with lungs of patients with IPF, current veterinary classifications of fibrotic lung disease are not entirely equivalent. Additional studies that profile these examples of spontaneous fibroses in animals for similarities to human IPF should prove useful for both human and animal investigators. In the meantime, studies of BLM-induced fibrosis in aged male mice remain the most clinically relevant model for preclinical study for human IPF. Addressing issues such as time course of treatment, animal size and characteristics, clinically irrelevant treatment endpoints, and reproducibility of therapeutic outcomes will improve the current status of preclinical studies. Elucidating the mechanisms responsible for the development of fibrosis and disrepair associated with aging through a collaborative approach between researchers will promote the development of models that more accurately represent the realm of interstitial lung diseases in humans.Entities:
Keywords: aged mice; asbestosis; bleomycin; idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; murine model
Year: 2017 PMID: 28804709 PMCID: PMC5532376 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Selected pulmonary fibrosis conditions in animal species.
| Selected pulmonary fibrosis conditions in animal species | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Species | Model/disease | Features | Histology |
| Mouse (C57BL/6J) | Bleomycin (BLM) (experimental) | Increased collagen deposition | |
| Patchy fibrosis associated with inflammatory infiltrates | |||
| Resolution in young mice starting at 3 weeks | |||
| Dog (West Highland Terrier) | Interstitial lung disease (ILD) | Septal widening and collagen deposition | |
| Normal alveolar cells | |||
| Donkey | Chronic pleuropulmonary fibrosis | Associated with asinine herpesvirus 5 infection | |
| Pleural, subpleural, and septal fibrosis extending to interstitium | |||
| Intra-alveolar fibrosis and alveolar septal elastosis | |||
| Horses | Equine multinodular pulmonary fibrosis | Associated with equine herpesvirus 5 infection | |
| Multifocal coalescing nodules within parenchyma, centered on alveoli | |||
| Cats | Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis | Temporally heterogeneous fibrosis without inflammation | |
| Patchy remodeling leading to honeycomb lung in late disease | |||
A variety of animal species exhibit pulmonary fibrosis conditions with characteristics similar to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) in humans. ILD has been studied as fibrosis occurs spontaneously in many animals, including West Highland Terriers, donkeys, cats, and horses. Mice have been used as experimental models with BLM-induced pulmonary fibrosis. Histologic images are provided at 10–20× magnification on Trichrome stain to display representative characteristics and similarities. Reproduced with permission, from Dr. Paul Mercer. .
Pros/cons of animal models for studying pulmonary fibrosis.
| Murine models | Pros | Cons | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bleomycin | Early molecular signature most similar to accelerated acute phase of IPF in humans | Patchy, young mice resolve spontaneously unless repeatedly doses | |
| Silica | Good model of lung injury in humans and persistence of fibrotic lesions | Lack of reproducibility, difficult delivery, prolonged time to fibrosis, absence of usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP)-like lesions | |
| Asbestosis | Recapitulates asbestos exposure in human lung fibrosis | Inhalation model requires at least a month for fibrosis to develop. Single intratracheal dose leads to central fibrosis rather than subpleural, unevenly distributed between lungs | |
| Cytokine overexpressing | Ability to dissect downstream signaling events relevant to specific fibrotic-inducing cytokines | Models limited to dissecting specific pathways, rather than recapitulating the complexity of human disease | |
| Fluorescent isothiocyanate | Relatively reproducible and persistent fibrotic phenotypes | Lack representative UIP and inflammatory infiltrates preceding fibrosis | |
| Radiation induced | Results in fibrosis, not pneumonitis if B6 mice are used | Need to wait a long time for development of fibrosis | |
| Familial models | Gave insight on telomere and telomerase gene involvement in IPF | May produce a susceptible phenotype, requiring a second hit | |
| Humanized (NOD/SCID mice) | Can afford insight into role of different fibroblast populations, dissects the contribution of epithelial-fibroblast crosstalk in the absence of immune cells | May not be representative of human disease where immune cells play a role. Expensive and requires specialized housing | |
| Dogs | Usually present in middle to old age. IPF in Westies shares some features of human disease; foci with severe lesions, histological criteria more typical for UIP may be present. Spontaneously develop ILD | The diffuse interstitial lesion, present in all affected Westies, histologically resembles fibrotic NSIP in man | |
| Cats | Anatomy of distal lung similar to humans. UIP-like disease. Spontaneously develop ILD | Strain-dependent | |
| Donkeys | Spontaneously develop ILD | Majority of cases of APF share key pathological features with human pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis not IPF | |
| Horses | Spontaneously develop ILD. Overlapping features of pulmonary fibrosis including weight loss and characteristic radiologic findings | Pathology not the same as IPF | |