Druilhe Pierre, Hagan Paul, Rook Graham A W
Biomedical Parasitology Unit, Institute Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, Paris, France.
Trends Microbiol. 2002;10(10 Suppl):S38-46. doi: 10.1016/s0966-842x(02)02437-x.
Models currently occupy the crucial first step in the research flow for the development of new drugs and vaccines. Some animal models are better at reflecting the host-pathogen interaction in humans than others; this depends on the pathogen and its host specificity. Data gathered from what are often poorly adapted models provide a mosaic of sometimes contradictory information, yet there is little incentive to better delineate the relevance of models or to exploit recent advances to develop improved ones. This review reports on three particularly intractable human pathogens - Mycobacterium, Plasmodium and Schistosoma - and reflects that the extent to which these model systems mimic infection and protection processes in humans might not be sufficiently well defined.
目前,模型在新药和疫苗研发的研究流程中占据着关键的第一步。一些动物模型比其他模型更能反映人类宿主与病原体之间的相互作用;这取决于病原体及其宿主特异性。从通常适应性较差的模型中收集的数据提供了有时相互矛盾的信息拼凑,但几乎没有动力去更好地界定模型的相关性,或利用最新进展来开发改进的模型。本综述报告了三种特别棘手的人类病原体——分枝杆菌、疟原虫和血吸虫——并反映出这些模型系统模拟人类感染和保护过程的程度可能尚未得到充分明确。