Phylogeny can inform animal model development for both inherited and induced conditions: Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)

IF 0.2 Q4 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Ideas in Ecology and Evolution Pub Date : 2021-08-03 DOI:10.24908/iee.2021.14.1.n
Mason B. Meers, N. Demers, Audra Hewett, Dakota Sorrelle
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Abstract

Abstract:    The use of animal models in research on human and veterinary diseases and disorders is retracting, though it is likely to remain critical for decades.  In light of increasing regulation and expectations of judicious use of animal subjects, we examine the idea that the use of animal models can be guided by phylogenetic relationships and modern evolutionary and cladistic analyses.  Given that inherited disorders, and indeed, even the developmental and physiological responses to non-inherited conditions, are subject to evolutionary forces, it follows that the observed differences in model organisms are the products of evolutionary divergence.  Understanding that divergence has the potential to elucidate which taxa are most likely to exhibit any given symptom or manifest a reaction in a broadly predictable fashion.  We examine two case studies, one the inherited disorder Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, and the other an entirely environmentally induced problem, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, or Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.  Both case studies reveal symptoms are largely congruent with phylogeny, suggesting relatively conservative evolution of developmental pathways.  It follows that it is possible to characterize the manifestation of symptoms or dysmorphologies to broad phylogenetic groups.  These data can then be used to inform research into possible treatments based on molecular genetic techniques sourced from unaffected taxa or even provide an evolutionary rationale for maximizing ethical decisions in the use and development of animal models in biomedical research.  We argue that the technique should become standard practice in the development of animal models.
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系统发育可以为遗传性和诱导性疾病的动物模型发育提供信息:杜氏肌营养不良症(DMD)和胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASD)。
摘要:动物模型在人类和兽医疾病和失调研究中的应用正在缩小,尽管它可能在几十年内仍然至关重要。鉴于越来越多的监管和对明智使用动物受试者的期望,我们研究了动物模型的使用可以由系统发育关系和现代进化和分支分析指导的想法。鉴于遗传性疾病,甚至是对非遗传性疾病的发育和生理反应,都受到进化力量的影响,因此,在模式生物中观察到的差异是进化分歧的产物。了解这种差异有可能阐明哪些分类群最有可能以一种广泛可预测的方式表现出任何给定的症状或表现出某种反应。我们研究了两个案例研究,一个是遗传性疾病杜氏肌营养不良症,另一个是完全由环境引起的问题,胎儿酒精谱系障碍,或胎儿酒精综合征。这两个病例研究显示,症状在很大程度上与系统发育一致,表明发育途径的进化相对保守。因此,有可能将症状或畸形的表现定性为广泛的系统发育群。然后,这些数据可以用于研究基于来自未受影响的类群的分子遗传技术的可能治疗方法,甚至为在生物医学研究中使用和开发动物模型时最大限度地做出伦理决策提供进化依据。我们认为这项技术应该成为动物模型开发的标准实践。
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Ideas in Ecology and Evolution
Ideas in Ecology and Evolution EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-
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审稿时长
36 weeks
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