Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Review of Pre-Clinical Murine Models of Human Disease
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Chemical Induced Colitis
2.1. Oxazolone Colitis
2.2. TNBS-Induced Colitis
2.3. Dextran-Sulphate-Sodium-Induced Colitis
3. Spontaneous Colitis
3.1. Iκκ-γ (NEMO) Deficiency Colitis
3.2. Interleukin-10 (IL-10) Deficiency Colitis
4. Immune Cell Induced Colitis
T-Cell Adoptive Transfer Model
5. Conclusions
- Mice and humans differ in their immune responses due to different immune system development, immune activation, and immune responses to similar antigens [154].
- Mouse experiments tend to not recapitulate the genetic and environmental diversity inherent in human populations, although these can be closely modelled through diet, microbiome, and environmental manipulations.
- To determine the importance of certain genes in disease pathology, researchers tend to depend on transgenic knockout mice or antibody depletion, whereas human disease risk is rarely associated with the complete loss of function of a single gene or protein.
- Most pre-clinical murine experiments fail to account for variability in response to a therapeutic intervention that may appear in human trials due to genetic polymorphisms. This may be addressed through the use of outbred mice but may have ethical and economic implications, due to the likely need to use a large sample size to achieve statistical significance between treatment groups [155].
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
IBD | Inflammatory bowel disease |
CD | Crohn’s disease |
UC | Ulcerative colitis |
TNBS | Trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid |
DSS | Dextran sulphate sodium |
OC | Oxazolone colitis |
NKT | Natural killer T cell |
IL- | Interleukin |
TGF | Transforming growth factor |
Infl.EC | Inflamed epithelial cells |
HEC | Healthy epithelial cells |
Dam.EC | Damaged epithelial cell |
CD | Cluster of differentiation |
ILC | Innate lymphoid cell |
NOD2 | Nucleotide-binding and oligomerisation domain-containing 2 |
SCID | Severe combined immunodeficiency |
NF-κB | Nuclear factor kappa B |
NEMO | NF-kB essential modulator (NEMO) |
Iκκ-γ | I-kappa-B kinase gamma |
RAG | Recombination-activating gene |
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Induction Method | Examples | Disease Modelled | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chemical Induced Colitis | Oxazolone colitis | UC |
|
|
Trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) colitis | CD |
|
| |
Dextran Sulfate Sodium (DSS) | UC and CD |
|
| |
Spontaneous colitis | Iκκ-γ (NEMO) Deficiency Colitis | NEMO-deficiency |
|
|
IL-10 Deficiency Colitis | Childhood IBD |
|
| |
Immune cell Induced Colitis | CD4+ T cell transfer | CD |
|
|
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Katsandegwaza, B.; Horsnell, W.; Smith, K. Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Review of Pre-Clinical Murine Models of Human Disease. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 9344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23169344
Katsandegwaza B, Horsnell W, Smith K. Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Review of Pre-Clinical Murine Models of Human Disease. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(16):9344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23169344
Chicago/Turabian StyleKatsandegwaza, Brunette, William Horsnell, and Katherine Smith. 2022. "Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Review of Pre-Clinical Murine Models of Human Disease" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 16: 9344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23169344
APA StyleKatsandegwaza, B., Horsnell, W., & Smith, K. (2022). Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Review of Pre-Clinical Murine Models of Human Disease. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(16), 9344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23169344