Genetically-Diverse Mice Improve Alzheimer's Research
Author: internet - Published 2019-01-09 06:00:00 PM - (373 Reads)A study published in Neuron found lab mice engineered to exhibit greater genetic diversity more accurately modeled the genetic, molecular, and clinical markers of people with Alzheimer's, reports Laboratory Equipment . The research was part of the Resilience-Alzheimer's Disease Consortium supported by the National Institute of Aging. The researchers bred a new strain of mice by crossing a well-established mouse model of familial Alzheimer's with a genetically diverse mouse strain. The offspring were genetically diverse while still carrying a high risk of Alzheimer's. The AD-BXD mouse strain more precisely modeled the genetic diversity observed in real-world populations of people with the disease, and also differed significantly in the development of pathologic and cognitive Alzheimer's symptoms. Furthermore, comparative analyses showed the C57BL/6J Alzheimer's mouse model retained resilience factors that mitigated the impact of Alzheimer's risk factor genes; this might help explain the difficulty of replicating the outcomes of research in C57BL/5J mice.