Rodent models produce data which underpin biomedical research and non-clinical drug trials, but translation from rodents into successful clinical outcomes is often lacking. There is a growing body of evidence showing that improving experimental design is key to improving the predictive nature of rodent studies and reducing the number of animals used in research. Age, one important factor in experimental design, is often poorly reported and can be overlooked. The authors conducted a survey to assess the age used for a range of models, and the reasoning for age choice. From 297 respondents providing 611 responses, researchers reported using rodents most often in the 6–20 week age range regardless of the biology being studied. The age referred to as ‘adult’ by respondents varied between six and 20 weeks. Practical reasons for the choice of rodent age were frequently given, with increased cost associated with using older animals and maintenance of historical data comparability being two important limiting factors. These results highlight that choice of age is inconsistent across the research community and often not based on the development or cellular ageing of the system being studied. This could potentially result in decreased scientific validity and increased experimental variability. In some cases the use of older animals may be beneficial. Increased scientific rigour in the choice of the age of rodent may increase the translation of rodent models to humans.
Hematologic malignancies such as acute and chronic myeloid leukemia are characterized by the malignant transformation of immature CD34+ progenitor cells. Transformation is associated with elevated expression of the Wilm's tumor gene encoded transcription factor (WT1). Here we demonstrate that WT1 can serve as a target for cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) with exquisite specificity for leukemic progenitor cells. HLA-A0201– restricted CTL specific for WT1 kill leukemia cell lines and inhibit colony formation by transformed CD34+ progenitor cells isolated from patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), whereas colony formation by normal CD34+ progenitor cells is unaffected. Thus, the tissue-specific transcription factor WT1 is an ideal target for CTL-mediated purging of leukemic progenitor cells in vitro and for antigen-specific therapy of leukemia and other WT1-expressing malignancies in vivo.
The use of Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) as bone anabolic is limited due to cost-benefit assessments. Preclinical studies evaluating the effects of PTH on bone have reported variable and often contradictory results. Here, we have applied a new approach using a combination of in-vivo longitudinal µCT, image processing techniques and finite element models to monitor early local changes in the whole tibia (divided in 40 compartments) and mechanical properties of female C57BL/6J mice treated with PTH 1-34, compared to controls. Compared with standard 3D bone morphometric analysis, our new approach allowed detection of much smaller and localised changes in bone mineral content (BMC) at very early time points (1 week vs 3 weeks with standard methods) and showed that changes do not occur uniformly over time and across the anatomical space. Indeed, in the PTH treated mice, significant changes in BMC were observed in the medial and posterior sectors of the proximal tibia, a week after treatment, and in the medial sector of the tibia midshaft region a week later (p < 0.05). By the third week, two thirds of the regions showed significantly higher values of BMC (p < 0.05). The effect of PTH on bone regional volume is similar to that on BMC, but there is almost no effect of PTH on bone tissue mineral density. The differences in estimated mechanical properties became significant after three weeks of treatment (p < 0.05). These results provide the first evidence of an early and localised PTH effect on murine bone, and show that our novel partitioning approach, compared to the standard evaluation protocol, allows a more precise quantification of bone changes following treatment, which would facilitate preclinical testing of novel mono- and/or combination therapies throughout the bone.
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