| Literature DB >> 34313795 |
James Amos-Landgraf1, Craig Franklin1, Virginia Godfrey2, Franziska Grieder3, Kristin Grimsrud4, Ian Korf5, Cat Lutz6, Terry Magnuson2, Oleg Mirochnitchenko3, Samit Patel5, Laura Reinholdt6, K C Kent Lloyd7.
Abstract
The Mutant Mouse Resource and Research Center (MMRRC) Program is the pre-eminent public national mutant mouse repository and distribution archive in the USA, serving as a national resource of mutant mice available to the global scientific community for biomedical research. Established more than two decades ago with grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the MMRRC Program supports a Consortium of regionally distributed and dedicated vivaria, laboratories, and offices (Centers) and an Informatics Coordination and Service Center (ICSC) at three academic teaching and research universities and one non-profit genetic research institution. The MMRRC Program accepts the submission of unique, scientifically rigorous, and experimentally valuable genetically altered and other mouse models donated by academic and commercial scientists and organizations for deposition, maintenance, preservation, and dissemination to scientists upon request. The four Centers maintain an archive of nearly 60,000 mutant alleles as live mice, frozen germplasm, and/or embryonic stem (ES) cells. Since its inception, the Centers have fulfilled 13,184 orders for mutant mouse models from 9591 scientists at 6626 institutions around the globe. Centers also provide numerous services that facilitate using mutant mouse models obtained from the MMRRC, including genetic assays, microbiome analysis, analytical phenotyping and pathology, cryorecovery, mouse husbandry, infectious disease surveillance and diagnosis, and disease modeling. The ICSC coordinates activities between the Centers, manages the website (mmrrc.org) and online catalog, and conducts communication, outreach, and education to the research community. Centers preserve, secure, and protect mutant mouse lines in perpetuity, promote rigor and reproducibility in scientific experiments using mice, provide experiential training and consultation in the responsible use of mice in research, and pursue cutting edge technologies to advance biomedical studies using mice to improve human health. Researchers benefit from an expansive list of well-defined mouse models of disease that meet the highest standards of rigor and reproducibility, while donating investigators benefit by having their mouse lines preserved, protected, and distributed in compliance with NIH policies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34313795 PMCID: PMC8314026 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-021-09894-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Location and web addresses of (current) Centers in the MMRRC Consortium
| Host Institution (year established) | Web Address |
|---|---|
| University of Missouri, Columbia (1999*) | mmrrc.missouri.edu |
| University of California, Davis (1999) | mmrrc.ucdavis.edu |
| The Jackson Laboratory (2010) | jax.org/mmrrc |
| University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1999) | med.unc.edu/mmrrc |
*Initially in partnership with Harlan, then established independently 2005
MMRRC consortium best practices
| All MMRRCs observe best practices in the following activities: |
| Importation, rederivation, maintenance (e.g., husbandry, care, and welfare), and distribution |
| Cryopreservation and recovery, pathogen surveillance and health monitoring, mouse genetics |
| Information technology, database management, and website and online services |
| Communications, outreach, and education |
Types of mouse submissions to the MMRRC Program
| MMRRC donation type | Description |
|---|---|
| Type 1 | Individual donating investigators |
| Type 2 | NIH Program Officer-sanctioned mice/lines |
| Type 3 | Contract to individual center |
Mutant mouse lines accepted into the MMRRC Program
| Deposition type | Cumulative (2000–2020) |
|---|---|
| Type 1: Investigator initiated, MMRRC Program supported | 1872 |
| Type 2: NIH initiated, MMRRC Program supported | 234 |
| Type 3: Investigator initiated and supported | 57,796 |
| Totals | 59,902 |
Fig. 1The cumulative annual increase in MMRRC Program holdings of unique mutant alleles and hybridoma cell lines beginning in 2002 to March 1, 2021. The change each year reflects the sum of all submissions (Type 1, Type 2, and Type 3) accepted and imported into the MMRRC repositories during that year
Fig. 2The proportional distribution of various formats (live, cryopreserved germplasm, cell lines) for all MMRRC holdings as of 2021. The number of mouse lines maintained as live breeding colonies is small relative to the germplasm and cell archives and reflects those lines undergoing active importation and awaiting cryopreservation and/or being actively distributed in response to orders for live mice; (1) a mutant allele maintained as a frozen embryo and/or sperm; (2) embryonic stem cells or hybridoma cell lines
Fig. 3The number of unique researchers annually who ordered from the MMRRC repositories each year between 2015 and 2020. The sudden dropoff of orders during 2020 has been attributed to the effects of the temporary shutdown of non-essential research activity and shuttered research laboratories during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic
Orders for mutant mouse lines from the MMRRC Program
| Metric | Cumulative 2000–2020 |
|---|---|
| Orders1 | 13,184 |
| Investigators2 | 9591 |
| Institutions2 | 6626 |
1Can include multiple mouse lines mice
2Unique
Fig. 4Annual number of peer-reviewed publications that cite or acknowledge ordering mice, germplasm, or cell lines from the MMRRC repositories between 2008 and 2020. As of March 1, 2021, a total of 1,924 publications have cited or acknowledge the use of the MMRRC. Unfortunately, because not all reseachers who publish remember to cite usage of the MMRRC, these numbers underrepresent the actual number of publications reporting on the use of mice, germplasm, or cell lines obtained from the MMRRC repositories