Genomic responses in mouse models poorly mimic human inflammatory diseases

Junhee Seok(Stanford University), H. Shaw Warren, Alex G. Cuenca(University of Florida), Michael Mindrinos(Stanford University), Henry V. Baker(University of Florida), Weihong Xu(Stanford University), Daniel R. Richards, Grace P. McDonald-Smith(Massachusetts General Hospital), Hong Gao(Stanford University), Laura Hennessy(Harborview Medical Center), Celeste C. Finnerty(Shriners Hospitals for Children - Galveston), Cecilia M. López(University of Florida), Shari Honari(Harborview Medical Center), Ernest E. Moore(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus), Joseph P. Minei(Parkland Memorial Hospital), Joseph Cuschieri(University of Washington), Paul E. Bankey(University of Rochester), Jeffrey L. Johnson(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus), Jason L. Sperry(UPMC Presbyterian), Avery B. Nathens(St. Michael's Hospital), Timothy R. Billiar(UPMC Presbyterian), Michael A. West(San Francisco General Hospital), Marc G. Jeschke(University of Toronto), Matthew B. Klein(University of Washington), Richard L. Gamelli(Loyola University Chicago), Nicole S. Gibran(University of Washington), Bernard H. Brownstein(Washington University in St. Louis), Carol Miller‐Graziano(University of Rochester), Steve E. Calvano, Philip H. Mason(Massachusetts General Hospital), J. Perren Cobb, Laurence G. Rahme(Harvard University), Stephen F. Lowry, Ronald V. Maier(University of Washington), Lyle L. Moldawer(University of Florida), David N. Herndon(Shriners Hospitals for Children - Galveston), Ronald W. Davis(Stanford University), Wenzhong Xiao(Harvard University), Ronald G. Tompkins(Harvard University), Amer Abouhamze, Ulysses J. Balis, David Camp, Asit K. De, Brian G. Harbrecht, Douglas L. Hayden, Amit Kaushal, Grant E. O’Keefe, Kenneth T. Kotz, Weijun Qian, David Schoenfeld, Michael B. Shapiro, Geoffrey M. Silver, Richard Smith, John D. Storey, Robert Tibshirani, Mehmet Toner, Julie Wilhelmy, Bram Wispelwey, Wing H. Wong
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 11, 2013
Cited by 2,989Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

A cornerstone of modern biomedical research is the use of mouse models to explore basic pathophysiological mechanisms, evaluate new therapeutic approaches, and make go or no-go decisions to carry new drug candidates forward into clinical trials. Systematic studies evaluating how well murine models mimic human inflammatory diseases are nonexistent. Here, we show that, although acute inflammatory stresses from different etiologies result in highly similar genomic responses in humans, the responses in corresponding mouse models correlate poorly with the human conditions and also, one another. Among genes changed significantly in humans, the murine orthologs are close to random in matching their human counterparts (e.g., R(2) between 0.0 and 0.1). In addition to improvements in the current animal model systems, our study supports higher priority for translational medical research to focus on the more complex human conditions rather than relying on mouse models to study human inflammatory diseases.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis