Fat rats skew research results
Nature.com
Overfed lab animals make poor subjects for experiments.
Failure to recognize that many laboratory animals live unhealthy
lives may be leading researchers to misinterpret their findings,
potentially misdirecting efforts to develop theraputic drugs.
The
problem, reports a group at the US National Institute on Aging in
Bethesda, Maryland, is that many rats and mice used in experiments are
so overweight that they are glucose intolerant and heading for an early
death (B. Martin et al. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA doi:10.1073/pnas.0912955107; 2010).
As a result, data from the animals — about, for example, the effects of
an anti-cancer drug — may not apply to normal-weight animals.
"The
vast majority of investigators who use rats and mice don't recognize
that their normal conditions are relatively unhealthy," says Mark
Mattson, chief of the National Institute on Aging's Laboratory of
Neurosciences and a co-author on the paper. "The most logical way to
extrapolate is to say any data we obtain in the animal model would be
more relevant to overweight, sedentary humans than normal-weight,
active individuals."
Mattson and his colleagues note that the
standard lab practice of allowing rats and mice continuous access to
food without much opportunity to exercise can cause some to balloon in
weight to up to 1 kilogram. Beneficial effects of a potential drug or
behaviour could simply result from its effect on the consequences of an
animal's unhealthy lifestyle, they say, and studies showing that
caloric restriction can extend lifespan may have to be reinterpreted.
"A major reason the lifespan of rats and mice is extended by caloric
restriction is they started from an unhealthy baseline," argues
Mattson. He and his co-workers identify areas as diverse as immune
function, cancer and neurological disorders that could be affected by
the problem.
Mattson says that including running wheels in
cages and feeding only on alternate days could solve the 'fat rat'
problem, adding that the institutional committees that oversee and
approve such experiments should encourage researchers to tackle the
problem.
The fat-rat hypothesis is certainly credible, says Robin Franklin, a
neuroscientist and director of research at the Department of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Cambridge, UK. "But I suspect it's one of many
factors that are responsible for the difference between animal models
and human diseases," he says, adding that the problem has not been
apparent in his research.
Still, Mattson and his colleagues
have penned "hundreds of papers using rodent models and are widely
known in their field", says Christian Newcomer, executive director of
the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal
Care, a non-profit organization based in Frederick, Maryland, that
accredits animal use in many laboratories, including those of the US
National Institutes of Health. "I think [the paper] is going to carry a
lot of weight."
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