Harper James M
Department of Pathology and Geriatrics Center, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Age (Dordr). 2008 Sep;30(2-3):135-45. doi: 10.1007/s11357-008-9057-0. Epub 2008 May 30.
Virtually all biomedical research makes use of a relatively small pool of laboratory-adapted, inbred, isogenic stocks of mice. Although the advantages of these models are many, there are a number of disadvantages as well. When studying a multifaceted process such as aging, the problems associated with using laboratory stocks are greatly inflated. On the other hand, wild-derived mouse stocks, loosely defined here as either wild-caught individuals or the recent progeny of wild-caught individuals, have much to offer to biogerontology research. Hence, the aims of this review are threefold: (1) to (re)acquaint readers with the pros and cons of using a typical inbred laboratory mouse model for aging research; (2) to reintroduce the notion of using wild-derived mouse stocks in aging research as championed by Austad, Miller and others for more than a decade, and (3) to provide an overview of recent advances in biogerontology using wild-derived mouse stocks.
几乎所有的生物医学研究都使用了相对较少的一批经过实验室驯化、近亲繁殖、基因同质的小鼠品系。尽管这些模型有很多优点,但也存在一些缺点。在研究诸如衰老这样一个多方面的过程时,使用实验室品系所带来的问题会被极大地放大。另一方面,野生来源的小鼠品系,这里宽泛地定义为野生捕获的个体或者野生捕获个体的近期后代,能为生物老年学研究提供很多东西。因此,本综述的目的有三个:(1)让读者重新了解使用典型的近交实验室小鼠模型进行衰老研究的优缺点;(2)重新引入奥斯特德、米勒等人十多年来一直倡导的在衰老研究中使用野生来源小鼠品系的理念;(3)概述使用野生来源小鼠品系在生物老年学方面的最新进展。