Wang Bingxuan, Chandrasekera P Charukeshi, Pippin John J
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, 5100 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20016, USA.
Curr Diabetes Rev. 2014 Mar;10(2):131-45. doi: 10.2174/1573399810666140508121012.
Among the most widely used animal models in obesity-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) research are the congenital leptin- and leptin receptor-deficient rodent models. These include the leptin-deficient ob/ob mice and the leptin receptor-deficient db/db mice, Zucker fatty rats, Zucker diabetic fatty rats, SHR/N-cp rats, and JCR:LA-cp rats. After decades of mechanistic and therapeutic research schemes with these animal models, many species differences have been uncovered, but researchers continue to overlook these differences, leading to untranslatable research. The purpose of this review is to analyze and comprehensively recapitulate the most common leptin/leptin receptor-based animal models with respect to their relevance and translatability to human T2DM. Our analysis revealed that, although these rodents develop obesity due to hyperphagia caused by abnormal leptin/leptin receptor signaling with the subsequent appearance of T2DM-like manifestations, these are in fact secondary to genetic mutations that do not reflect disease etiology in humans, for whom leptin or leptin receptor deficiency is not an important contributor to T2DM. A detailed comparison of the roles of genetic susceptibility, obesity, hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, and diabetic complications as well as leptin expression, signaling, and other factors that confound translation are presented here. There are substantial differences between these animal models and human T2DM that limit reliable, reproducible, and translatable insight into human T2DM. Therefore, it is imperative that researchers recognize and acknowledge the limitations of the leptin/leptin receptor- based rodent models and invest in research methods that would be directly and reliably applicable to humans in order to advance T2DM management.
在肥胖诱导的2型糖尿病(T2DM)研究中,使用最广泛的动物模型是先天性瘦素和瘦素受体缺陷型啮齿动物模型。这些模型包括瘦素缺陷型ob/ob小鼠、瘦素受体缺陷型db/db小鼠、Zucker肥胖大鼠、Zucker糖尿病肥胖大鼠、SHR/N-cp大鼠和JCR:LA-cp大鼠。在使用这些动物模型进行了数十年的机制和治疗研究后,发现了许多物种差异,但研究人员仍然忽视这些差异,导致研究结果无法转化应用。本综述的目的是分析并全面概括最常见的基于瘦素/瘦素受体的动物模型与人类TIDM的相关性和可转化性。我们的分析表明,尽管这些啮齿动物由于瘦素/瘦素受体信号异常导致食欲亢进从而发展为肥胖,并随后出现类似T2DM的表现,但实际上这些都是由基因突变引起的继发性现象,并不反映人类的疾病病因,因为瘦素或瘦素受体缺乏并非人类T2DM的重要致病因素。本文详细比较了遗传易感性、肥胖、高血糖、高胰岛素血症、胰岛素抵抗、糖尿病并发症以及瘦素表达、信号传导和其他影响转化的因素所起的作用。这些动物模型与人类T2DM之间存在显著差异,限制了对人类T2DM进行可靠、可重复和可转化的深入研究。因此,研究人员必须认识到并承认基于瘦素/瘦素受体的啮齿动物模型的局限性,并投入到能够直接且可靠地应用于人类的研究方法中,以推进T2DM的管理。