FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 16 , Pages 2663-2673, 20 August 2009

Animal models of human amyloidoses: Are transgenic mice worth the time and trouble?

Edited by Per Hammarström

Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, W.M. Keck Center for Autoimmune Diseases, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, Mail Code MEM-230, La Jolla, CA 92037, United States

Received 5 June 2009; received in revised form 15 July 2009; accepted 15 July 2009. published online 22 July 2009.

Abstract 

The amyloidoses are the prototype gain of toxic function protein misfolding diseases. As such, several naturally occurring animal models and their inducible variants provided some of the first insights into these disorders of protein aggregation. With greater analytic knowledge and the increasing flexibility of transgenic and gene knockout technology, new models have been generated allowing the interrogation of phenomena that have not been approachable in more reductionist systems, i.e. behavioral readouts in the neurodegenerative diseases, interactions among organ systems in the transthyretin amyloidoses and taking pre-clinical therapeutic trials beyond cell culture. The current review describes the features of both transgenic and non-transgenic models and discusses issues that appear to be unresolved even when viewed in their organismal context.

Keywords: Amyloidosis, Transgenic model, Amyloid A, AL amyloid, Cystatin c, Gelsolin, Transthyretin, Alzheimer’s disease, Serpinopathies, Familial dementias

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PII: S0014-5793(09)00562-6

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2009.07.031

FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 16 , Pages 2663-2673, 20 August 2009