Parish N M, Cooke A
Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, UK.
Baillieres Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1995 Jan;9(1):175-98. doi: 10.1016/s0950-351x(95)80915-5.
This review provides basic information concerning the major animal models in use for the study of autoimmune endocrine diseases (AEDs). Although several other models exist which parallel human AEDs such as autoimmune orchitis, most research in this area has centred on animal models of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and thyroiditis. These models, between them, appear to exhibit most of the disease manifestations of their human counterparts and thereby permit the study of possible methods of intervention in the disease process. While no one model represents a perfect correlation with the human disease it represents, common characteristics are recognizable between them. For instance, the central role of activated T cells in controlling the disease process. The chapter continues by examining the various ways in which models of autoimmunity, specifically IDDM and experimental allergic thyroiditis (EAT), have been used to investigate the possibility of preventing or arresting autoimmune destruction. Several different approaches are described that illustrate the variety of techniques that have proven both potentially, or in reality, effective and those that have proven less efficacious than first hoped.
本综述提供了有关用于研究自身免疫性内分泌疾病(AEDs)的主要动物模型的基本信息。尽管还存在其他一些与人类AEDs相似的模型,如自身免疫性睾丸炎,但该领域的大多数研究都集中在胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(IDDM)和甲状腺炎的动物模型上。这些模型之间似乎展现出了其人类对应疾病的大多数疾病表现,从而使得对疾病进程中可能的干预方法的研究成为可能。虽然没有一个模型能与它所代表的人类疾病完全相关,但它们之间的共同特征是可以识别的。例如,活化T细胞在控制疾病进程中的核心作用。本章接着探讨了自身免疫模型,特别是IDDM和实验性变应性甲状腺炎(EAT),被用于研究预防或阻止自身免疫破坏可能性的各种方式。文中描述了几种不同的方法,这些方法展示了已被证明在潜在或实际中有效的各种技术,以及那些被证明不如最初期望有效的技术。