免疫系统
生物
免疫学
实验鼠
动物模型
微生物学
动物
遗传学
基因
内分泌学
作者
Stephan P. Rosshart,Jasmin Herz,Brian G. Vassallo,Ashli Hunter,Morgan Wall,Jonathan H. Badger,John A. McCulloch,Dimitrios G. Anastasakis,Aishe A. Sarshad,Irina Leonardi,Nicholas Collins,Joshua Blatter,Seong-Ji Han,Samira Tamoutounour,Svetlana Potapova,Mark Claire,Wuxing Yuan,Shurjo K. Sen,Matthew S. Dreier,Benedikt Hild
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2019-08-01
卷期号:365 (6452)
被引量:532
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.aaw4361
摘要
Born to be a wildling Inbred laboratory mouse strains are used extensively in basic and translational immunology research. However, the commensal and pathogenic repertoire of resident microbes encountered in the wild is not replicated in a lab setting. This can substantially distort how the immune system develops and functions, leading to false assumptions of how our own “wild” immune system works. Rosshart et al. circumvented this dilemma by implanting lab-strain embryos into wild mice (see the Perspective by Nobs and Elinav). The resultant “wildlings” had a systemic immune phenotype and a bacterial, viral, and fungal microbiome much closer to those of their wild counterparts. In two preclinical experiments, where lab mice had previously failed to predict the human response to drug treatments, wildlings accurately phenocopied patient outcomes. Science , this issue p. eaaw4361 ; see also p. 444
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