Islam Md Ariful, Kshirsagar Sudhir, Reddy Arubala P, Sehar Ujala, Reddy P Hemachandra
Department of Internal Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, TX, USA.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, College Human Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis Rep. 2024 Sep 3;8(1):1171-1184. doi: 10.3233/ADR-240126. eCollection 2024.
Several decades of research on cell and animal models contributed tremendously to understanding human diseases. Particularly, research on rodents and non-human primates revealed that animal research is a major and important component in biomedical research in learning complex pathophysiological processes. Further, animal research helped us to understand human diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease. In addition, animal research has also helped us to test hundreds of drugs and develop treatments for human use. Researchers can gain a better understanding of key biological and physiological processes in humans by comparing them to laboratory animals. Based on their relevance and resemblance to people, or even usual living conditions, scientists rationalize the use of particular animal models in their studies. It is suggested that in the National Institutes of Health and other agencies-funded research, animal models should be carefully selected to study the biology and pathophysiology of human health and diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. However, it is critical to use a minimum number of animals for human research. Further, it is also noted that the use and reuse of behavioral, molecular, and biochemical data from wild-type (WT) control mice with mutant lines of disease models, as long as the genetic background is the same in both WT and disease mice. On the other hand, anonymous readers have challenged the use and reuse of WT mice data for comparison. In the current article, we discuss the minimum utility of animals, covering the 3Rs, Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement, and also discuss the use and reuse of behavioral, molecular, and biochemical data.
几十年来对细胞和动物模型的研究极大地促进了对人类疾病的理解。特别是,对啮齿动物和非人类灵长类动物的研究表明,动物研究是生物医学研究中了解复杂病理生理过程的一个主要且重要的组成部分。此外,动物研究帮助我们理解了诸如阿尔茨海默病等人类疾病。另外,动物研究还帮助我们测试了数百种药物并开发出供人类使用的治疗方法。通过将人类的关键生物学和生理过程与实验动物进行比较,研究人员能够更好地理解这些过程。基于动物与人类的相关性、相似性甚至日常生存条件,科学家们在研究中合理地选择特定的动物模型。有人建议,在美国国立卫生研究院及其他机构资助的研究中,应谨慎选择动物模型来研究人类健康和疾病(如阿尔茨海默病及其他痴呆症)的生物学和病理生理学。然而,在人类研究中使用最少数量的动物至关重要。此外,还应注意的是,只要野生型(WT)对照小鼠和疾病模型突变系的基因背景相同,就可以使用和重复使用来自它们的行为、分子和生化数据。另一方面,匿名读者对使用和重复使用WT小鼠数据进行比较提出了质疑。在本文中,我们讨论了动物的最小使用量,涵盖了3R原则,即替代、减少和优化,同时也讨论了行为、分子和生化数据的使用和重复使用。