experimental animal models ( lab animals )

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06/24/2022 Dr.Ebrahim ali ali AL alfi Biochemistry level 4 Faculty of science Mansoura university Experimental animal models

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Page 1: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

05/02/2023

Dr.Ebrahim ali ali AL alfi

Biochemistry level 4 Faculty of science

Mansoura university

Experimental animal models

Page 2: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Animal model :is a living, non-human animal used during the research and investigation of human disease, for the purpose of better understanding the disease without the added risk of harming an actual human being during the process.

• The animal chosen usually meets a determined taxonomic equivalency to humans, so as to react to disease or its treatment in a way that resembles human physiology as needed.

• The use of animal models allows researchers to investigate disease states in ways which would be inaccessible in a human patient, performing procedures on the non-human animal that imply a level of harm that would not be considered ethical to inflict on a human.

• Many drugs, treatments and cures for human diseases have been developed with the use of animal models.

Animal models serving in

research may have an

existing inbred induced diseaseinjury that is similar to a

human condition

Page 3: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

 

There are three main types of animal models

Homologous animals:

same causes, symptoms and

treatment options as would humans who

have the same disease

Isomorphic animals:

share the same symptoms and

treatments

Predictive Animals:

when animals strictly display only the

treatment characteristics of a

disease. This method is commonly used

when researchers do not know the cause

of a disease.

Page 4: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

The choice of an animal depends on its suitability for attaining a particular research goal

a) If large amounts of antiserum are sought, rabbit, goat, sheep, or horse might be an appropriate experimental animal.

b) If the goal is development of a protective vaccine, the animal chosen must be susceptible can be mouse, rabbit

c) But if growth of the infectious agent is limited to humans and primates, vaccine development may require the use of monkeys, chimpanzees, or baboons

In vitro assays typically rely on simple interactions of chemicals with a drug target, such as receptor binding or enzyme activity inhibition. However, in vitro results often poorly correlate with in vivo results because the complicated physiological environment is absent in the in vitro testing system.

Page 5: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Commonly Used Lab Animals

Page 6: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Mouse Lifespan: 1-3 years  Gestation: 21 days Weaning: 21 days Sexual maturity Females: 6 weeks Males: 8 weeks Estrus: 4-6 days

.

Mouse breeding

Page 7: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Gestation: 21 days Weaning: 21 days Estrus: 4-6 days Sexual maturity

Females: 6 weeks**Males: 8 weeks

Lifespan2-3.5 years

Rat Breeding

Page 8: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Gestation: 30-33 days Parturition = Kindling Weaning: 4-6 weeks Offspring

NZW: 8-10 kitsDutch: 5-6 kits

Ovulation: Coitus Induced Estrus: Continuous Lifespan

NZW: 5-6+ yearsDutch: 5-10+ years

Rabbit Breeding

Page 9: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

The Best Part of the Class:

Non-human Primates

Page 10: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Mustela putorius furo Stinky little thieving weasel

Illegal in California“Nail” trims

Use small nail-trim scissors or human nail clips.Blood collection: use chemical restraint

Sample sitesJugular veinCranial vena cava—preferredCephalic vein

Long-gestation period Precocious young

Open-rooted teeth may become maloccluded Fastidious eatersGrass-based commercial pelletVitamin C supplementation:

CANNOT SYTHESIZE THEIR OWN. Must be supplemented.Fresh waterFootpad dermatitis

Ferrets 

Guinea Pigs

Page 11: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Hamsters live an average 18 to 24 months and have a gestation period of 16 days.

Active burrowing animals adapted to desert environment.Life span 3.5 yearsProne to autogenic seizuresGood at escapingDiet similar to hamsterNasal dermatitisTyzzer’s disease caused by B. piliformis Never grab gerbil tails: DEGLOVING INJURY 

Hamsters

Gerbils

Page 12: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Why mouse preferred?a) The closest to humans –

mammal  we share virtually ALL of our genes and use them in similar ways

b)  The most complex - integration of systems (endocrine, immune, nervous etc.) 

c) ability to quickly multiply, reproducing as often as every nine weeks. generation time is ~ 3 months, so genetics can be done

d) Easy to handle mice are ~ 3 inches long, can keep many mice in a room.

Page 13: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Occupational HealthThree main concerns regarding the use of any lab or exotic animal:

 

Risk Preventation measures

Allergies Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)Occupational Health Surveillance ProgramThrough Sanitation

Injury PPEProper Handling (Confident handlers!)

Zoonotic Disease PPEThrough sanitationOccupational Health Surveillance Program

Page 14: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Animals are used to understand basic biology, as “models” for studying human biology and disease, and as test subjects for the development and testing of drugs, vaccines, and other biologicals (i.e. antibodies, hormones, ingredients in vaccines, etc.) to improve and advance human health.

The use of genetic engineering—manipulation of an animal’s DNA or genes—is prevalent throughout many fields of research, particularly biomedical. “The mouse has become the flagship of animal testing, especially useful with genetic modifications, gene knock outs [genes are removed], and knock ins [genes are added].

In 2003, NIH [National Institutes of Health] launched the Knock out Mouse Project and has awarded more than $50 million with the goal of creating a library of mouse embryonic stem cells lines, each with a gene knocked out.”

Biomedical Research

Page 15: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

animals are subjected to invasive procedures, which can include :Surgeries , traumatic injuries , burns, force-feeding , blood draws , biopsies, Food , water , and social deprivation, dart gun sedation , prolonged restraint , viral and bacterial infections , behavioral and environmental manipulations, and exposure to toxic drugs and chemicals.

Examples include, “creating heart attacks, heart failure, abnormal heart rhythms, strokes, and other cardiovascular traumas in monkeys, dogs, pigs, and other

animals; inducing symptoms of migraines in cats and primates through brain stimulation and manipulation with chemicals; implanting electrodes into the intestines of dogs to

induce motion sickness and vomiting; implanting electrodes into the brains and eyes of monkeys and cats to conduct neurological and vision experiments; and dropping weights

onto rodents to produce spinal cord injuries and paralysis.

In order to create these models,

Page 16: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Anti-inflammatory animal models

Anti-pyretic animal models

Anti-arrhythmic animal models

Anti-hypertensive animal models

Anti-hyperglycemic animal models

Anti-cholestrolemic animal models

uses

Page 17: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Animal models for CNS activity

Animal models to evaluate Muscle relaxant activity

Model to evaluate CNS depression & sedation

Animal models for anti-anxiety activity

Anti-convulsant & Anti-epileptic animal models

Analgesic animal models

Page 18: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Rabbit’s sensory system may be studied in basic research; she may be used as a model for eye and skin disorders, or used in eye and skin irritancy tests for environmental toxicity testing.

Dogs, typically young purpose-bred beagles, are commonly used in cardiovascular studies, heart and lung research, genetic studies, age-related research, pulmonary studies, cancer research, and orthopedics, such as the development of prosthetic devices for hip and knee replacements, vertebral fusion models, cervical disc degeneration, etc.

Cats “have long been a mainstay of nih-funded studies of neurological, cardiovascular, and respiratory diseases, and the immune system.” Researchers also use cats in cancer research, genetic disorders, and eye, ear, and infectious disease research.

Nonhuman primates are used in research on vaccines, infectious, cardiovascular, and neurological diseases, aging, reproductive biology, gene therapy, drug addiction, xenotransplantation (cross-species transplants), and vaccine and toxicity testing. The two most common primate species used by far are rhesus , chimpanzees and cynomolgus macaques.

Guinea pigs and hamsters, who are both used a great deal in toxicity testing and as models for infectious, cardiovascular, and neurological diseases, and drug abuse research.

Both mice and rats are heavily used in vaccine and drug research and testing. Birds are used in research on organ development and deformity, visual impairment, muscular

dystrophy, and nutrition, among other things.

As models, scientists aim to produce artificially, a condition in an animal in a laboratory that may resemble the human equivalent of a medical disease or injury.

For example :

Page 19: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )

Millions of animals and taxpayer dollars are used in the production and testing of biologicals, such as vaccines and antibodies.

For example, a complete batch test for a therapeutic protein can involve 12,000 mice and cost $2.4 million; 2007 estimates for the cost of drug development and to

bring it to market range from $800 million to $1.7 billion. Potential drugs are often required to be tested in at least two animal species in preclinical

trials before moving on to human clinical trials.Yet “only around 5% of drugs that show potential in animal studies ever get licensed for

human use.” Potency tests of such products as vaccines are still based routinely on the principle of

protection, i.e., survival or death after exposure, which was first introduced in the 1890s. Many of these tests are exceptionally cruel, involving high levels of pain and distress for a

range of species from rodents to nonhuman primates (including chimpanzees).

Drug and vaccine development

Page 20: Experimental animal models ( lab animals )