Homanics G E, Hiller-Sturmhöfel S
Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Alcohol Health Res World. 1997;21(4):298-309.
Recently developed approaches to creating genetically engineered animals have expanded researchers' repertoire of methods to investigate the roles of individual genes in the development of certain behaviors and diseases, including alcoholism. For example, knockout mice, in which single mouse genes have been inactivated, have allowed scientists to assess the roles of those genes in mediating some of alcohol's effects. This approach has been further refined using conditional gene knockout technology, which allows the inactivation of a gene only in certain cells or during specific developmental periods. Alternatively, transgenic mice (i.e., mice that carry a foreign gene in addition to their own genes) have been created in which researchers can activate or inactivate the foreign gene at will. Although these genetic engineering technologies have not yet been used extensively in alcohol research, they offer great promise in analyzing the functions of genes that may be involved in determining alcohol's effects on the body and the development of alcoholism.
最近开发的用于创建基因工程动物的方法,扩展了研究人员用于探究单个基因在某些行为和疾病(包括酗酒)发展中所起作用的方法库。例如,敲除小鼠(其中单个小鼠基因已被灭活)使科学家能够评估这些基因在介导酒精某些作用方面的作用。使用条件性基因敲除技术进一步完善了这种方法,该技术允许仅在某些细胞中或特定发育时期使基因失活。另外,已经创建了转基因小鼠(即除自身基因外还携带外源基因的小鼠),研究人员可以随意激活或灭活外源基因。尽管这些基因工程技术尚未在酒精研究中广泛使用,但它们在分析可能参与确定酒精对身体的影响以及酗酒发展的基因功能方面具有巨大潜力。