| Literature DB >> 31466386 |
Raquel Vieira1, Selma B Souto2, Elena Sánchez-López1,3,4, Ana López Machado3, Patricia Severino5,6, Sajan Jose7, Antonello Santini8, Amelia M Silva9,10, Ana Fortuna11,12, Maria Luisa García13,14, Eliana B Souto15,16.
Abstract
Diabetes is a complex disease characterized by hyperglycemia, together with polyuria, polydipsia, and polyphagia. While Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) results from genetic, environmental, or immune dysfunction factors leading to pancreatic β-cell destruction depriving the organism from endogenous insulin, Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is characterized by peripheral insulin resistance. Depending on the type of diabetes mellitus and drug mechanism to study, the animal model should be carefully selected among the wide variety of the currently available ones. This review discusses the most common animal models currently employed to study T1DM and T2DM. Moreover, an overview on the administration routes that could be used is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: administration routes; animal models; diabetes mellitus; in vivo
Year: 2019 PMID: 31466386 PMCID: PMC6780268 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Animal models most commonly used to study type 1 diabetes mellitus.
| Induction Mechanism | Model | Main Features | Possible Uses | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Simple model of hyperglycemia | Testing drugs (new insulin formulations) or therapies (transplantation) |
A more stable model |
Mortality is relatively more frequent | [ | |
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Comparatively cheaper, easier to develop and maintain | ||||||
| Model of induced insulitis | Treatments that may prevent β-cell death |
Used for longer experimental studies |
May produce toxic effects on other tissues | |||
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May be applied to higher animals |
STZ is relatively unstable and solution should ideally be made immediately prior to injection | |||||
| Simple model of hyperglycemia | Transplantation models |
Selective loss of pancreatic β-cells leaving α and δ cells intact |
Hyperglycemia develops primarily by direct cytotoxic action on the β-cells and insulin deficiency rather than consequence of insulin resistance | [ | ||
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Animals live longer without insulin treatment (since there is a residual insulin secretion) |
Less stable and reversible because of the spontaneous regeneration of β-cells | |||||
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Relatively less ketosis and resulting mortality |
May produce toxic effects on other tissues | |||||
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Comparatively cheaper, easier to develop and to maintain |
High variability of results on development of hyperglycemia | |||||
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| β-cell destruction due to an autoimmune process | Understanding genetics of T1DM |
Hyperlipidemia can be also studied, as lipid content increase |
Polyphagia and polyuria occurrence | [ |
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| Understanding mechanism of T1DM |
Hyperglycemia persists for several days |
A diabetes and obesity symptom overlaps | [ | ||
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| Treatments that may prevent β-cell death and/or manipulate autoimmune process | |||||
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Not identical to those in human disease | ||||||
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| β-cell destruction due to ER stress. Insulin dependent. | New formulations of insulin |
The lack of β-cell mass makes it an alternative to STZ-treated mice in transplantation studies | [ | ||
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| β-cell destruction induced by viral infection of b-cells | Establish potential role of viruses in the development of T1DM |
Stable and irreversible diabetes can be induced |
Comparatively costlier to develop | [ |
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Technical expert is required to handle of virus | ||||||
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| Hyperglycemia induction in pigs, dogs and primates | Treatments that may prevent β-cell death |
Reasonably accurate model of auto transplantation of islets in humans |
Very invasive surgery | [ |
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In large animal models, spontaneous diabetes is relatively rare and unpredictable in onset | ||||||
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Some models combine a partial pancre-atectomy with STZ treatment, thus reducing the dose of STZ |
Interspecies variation in the β-cell toxicity of alloxan or STZ | [ | |||
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Narrow window of efficacy. |
* Also used in T2DM research.
Animal models most commonly used to study type 2 diabetes mellitus.
| Induction Mechanism | Model | Main Features | Possible Uses | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Obesity-induced hyperglycemia, with hyperphagic, obese, hyperinsulinaemic and hyperglycemic animals | Treatments to improve insulin resistance |
Pancreatic islet volume dramatically increased |
Infertile mice | [ | |
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Metabolic aberrations (hyperlipidemia disturbance in temperature regulation, lower physical activity) | ||||||
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Diabetes not particular severe and thus not completely representative of human T2DM | ||||||
| Treatments to improve β-cell function |
Ketosis after a few months of age, having a relative short lifespan | [ | ||||
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Diabetic complications also develop |
Hypertensive rats | [ | ||||
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Females do not develop overt diabetes | ||||||
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| Obesity-induced hyperglycemia | Treatments to improve insulin resistance | |||
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| Treatments to improve β-cell function |
Three stages of histological changes can be observed | [ | |||
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| Some models show diabetic complications |
Renal complications | ||||
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Adiposity, plasma triglycerides, cholesterol and free fatty acid levels are increased |
Only male mice develop hyperglycemia | ||||
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Indicated for diabetic wound healing studies | |||||
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Nephropathy presence | ||||||
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| Obesity-induced hyperglycemia | Treatments to improve insulin resistance |
Baboons and humans are genetically, anatomically and physiologically very similar |
Handling of baboon is somewhat difficult | [ |
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| Treatments to improve β-cell function |
Cardiac complications can be studied |
Veterinarian is required | |||
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| Treatments to prevent diet-induced obesity |
Costly model containing | ||||
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| Hyperglycemia induced by insufficient β-cell function or mass | Treatments to improve β-cell function |
Allow the study of β-cell function and diabetic complications |
Interstrains variability of the islets morphology and metabolism | [ |
| Treatments to improve β-cell survival | ||||||
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| Amyloid deposition in islets | Treatments to prevent amyloid deposition |
Express human IAPP under the insulin promoter, which can form amyloid within the islets for further study |
Transgenic mice | [ |
| Treatments to improve β-cell function | ||||||
| β-cell destruction due to ER stress | Treatments to prevent ER stress |
β-cell adaption to increased insulin demand is restricted | ||||
| Treatments to improve β-cell survival | ||||||
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| Amyloid deposition in islets | Treatments to improve β-cell function |
Islet amyloidosis study |
More expensive models | [ |
| β-cell destruction | Treatments to prevent diet-induced obesity | |||||
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Similarities to human condition |
Figure 1Streptozocin diabetes induction model (based on [17]). (A) Single-dose Streptozocin, (B) Multiple-low dose streptozocin, (C) Streptozocin mechanism on the β-cells nucleus and side effects in other organs with glucose transporter subtype 2 (GLUT-2) receptors. Streptozotocin (STZ) behaves as a glucose analogue and is transported into the pancreatic β-cell by GLUT-2. It produced DNA alkylation and over-activation of poly-ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) causing NAD+ depletion, cellular ATP reduction, and compromising insulin.
Figure 2Alloxan induced diabetes mechanism (based on [46]). Alloxan is reduced to dialuric acid and re-oxidized to alloxan producing alloxan radicals and reactive oxygen species (ROS) which undergo dismutation (by superoxide dismutase, SOD) to form hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Hydroxyl radicals (*OH) may also be formed by side reactions. These *OH cause β-cell DNA fragmentation, leading to apoptosis.