| Literature DB >> 31217881 |
Kunxiang He1, Jinjie Wang1, Haozhe Shi1, Qiongyang Yu1, Xin Zhang2, Mengmeng Guo1, Huijun Sun3, Xiao Lin1, Yue Wu4, Luya Wang4, Yuhui Wang1, Xunde Xian5, George Liu1.
Abstract
Small rodents, especially mice and rats, have been widely used in atherosclerosis studies even though humans exhibit completely different lipoprotein metabolism and atherosclerotic characteristics. Until recently, various rodent models of human familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) have been created, including mice, rats, and golden Syrian hamsters. Although hamsters reportedly possess metabolic features similar to humans, there is no systematic characterization of the properties of circulating lipids and atherosclerotic lesions in these rodent models. We used three FH animal species (mice, rats, and hamsters) with low-density lipoprotein receptor (Ldlr) deficiency to fully assess lipoprotein metabolism and atherosclerotic characteristics. Compared to chow diet-fed mice and rats, Ldlr knockout (KO) hamsters showed increased cholesterols in LDL fractions similar to human FH patients. Upon 12-week high-cholesterol/high-fat diet feeding, both heterozygous and homozygous Ldlr KO hamsters displayed hyperlipidemic phenotypes, whereas only homozygous Ldlr KO mice and rats showed only moderate increases in plasma lipid levels. Moreover, rats were resistant to diet-induced atherosclerosis compared to mice, and hamsters showed more atherosclerotic lesions in the aortas and coronary arteries. Further morphological study revealed that only hamsters developed atherosclerosis in the abdominal segments, which is highly similar to FH patients. This unique animal model will provide insight into the translational study of human atherosclerosis and could be useful for developing novel treatments for FH patients.Entities:
Keywords: Mouse; atherosclerosis; familial hypercholesterolemia; hamster; low-density lipoprotein receptor; rat
Year: 2019 PMID: 31217881 PMCID: PMC6556657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transl Res Impact factor: 4.060