Shively Carol A, Clarkson Thomas B
Wake Forest University Primate Center, Department of Pathology, Section on Comparative Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157-1040, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2009 Sep;71(9):715-21. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20720.
This special issue of AJP is focused on research using nonhuman primates as models to further the understanding of women's health. Nonhuman primates play a unique role in translational science by bridging the gap between basic and clinical investigations. The use of nonhuman primates in biomedical research challenges our resolve to treat all life as sacred. The scientific community has responded by developing ethical guidelines for the care and the use of primates and clarifying the responsibility of investigators to insure the physical and psychological well-being of nonhuman primates used in research. Preclinical investigations often involve the use of animal models. Rodent models have been the mainstay of biomedical science and have provided enormous insight into the workings of many mammalian systems that have proved applicable to human biological systems. Rodent models are dissimilar to primates in numerous ways, which may limit the generalizability to human biological systems. These limitations are much less likely in nonhuman primates and in Old World primates, in particular, Macaques are useful models for investigations involving the reproductive system, bioenergetics, obesity and diabetes, cardiovascular health, central nervous system function, cognitive and social behavior, the musculoskeletal system, and diseases of aging. This issue considers primate models of polycystic ovary syndrome; diet effects on glycemic control, breast and endometrium; estrogen, reproductive life stage and atherosclerosis; estrogen and diet effects on inflammation in atherogenesis; the neuroprotective effects of estrogen therapy; social stress and visceral obesity; and sex differences in the role of social status in atherogenesis. Unmet research needs in women's health include the use of diets in nonhuman primate studies that are similar to those consumed by human beings, primate models of natural menopause, dementia, hypertension, colon cancer, and frailty in old age, and dedicated colonies for the study of breast cancer.
《美国生理学杂志》的这一特刊聚焦于使用非人类灵长类动物作为模型的研究,以增进对女性健康的理解。非人类灵长类动物在转化科学中发挥着独特作用,它弥合了基础研究与临床研究之间的差距。在生物医学研究中使用非人类灵长类动物对我们将所有生命视为神圣的信念提出了挑战。科学界对此做出了回应,制定了灵长类动物护理和使用的伦理准则,并明确了研究人员确保用于研究的非人类灵长类动物身心健康的责任。临床前研究通常涉及动物模型的使用。啮齿动物模型一直是生物医学科学的支柱,并为许多已证明适用于人类生物系统的哺乳动物系统的运作提供了巨大的见解。啮齿动物模型在许多方面与灵长类动物不同,这可能会限制其对人类生物系统的普遍性。在非人类灵长类动物中,尤其是旧世界灵长类动物中,这些局限性要小得多。猕猴是涉及生殖系统、生物能量学、肥胖和糖尿病、心血管健康、中枢神经系统功能、认知和社会行为、肌肉骨骼系统以及衰老疾病研究的有用模型。本期探讨了多囊卵巢综合征的灵长类动物模型;饮食对血糖控制、乳腺和子宫内膜的影响;雌激素、生殖生命阶段与动脉粥样硬化;雌激素和饮食对动脉粥样硬化炎症的影响;雌激素疗法的神经保护作用;社会压力与内脏肥胖;以及社会地位在动脉粥样硬化中的作用的性别差异。女性健康方面尚未满足的研究需求包括在非人类灵长类动物研究中使用与人类食用的饮食相似的饮食、自然绝经、痴呆、高血压、结肠癌和老年虚弱的灵长类动物模型,以及用于乳腺癌研究的专门群体。