Knockout mouse models as a resource for the study of rare diseases

被引:0
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作者
Patricia da Silva-Buttkus
Nadine Spielmann
Tanja Klein-Rodewald
Christine Schütt
Antonio Aguilar-Pimentel
Oana V. Amarie
Lore Becker
Julia Calzada-Wack
Lillian Garrett
Raffaele Gerlini
Markus Kraiger
Stefanie Leuchtenberger
Manuela A. Östereicher
Birgit Rathkolb
Adrián Sanz-Moreno
Claudia Stöger
Sabine M. Hölter
Claudia Seisenberger
Susan Marschall
Helmut Fuchs
Valerie Gailus-Durner
Martin Hrabě de Angelis
机构
[1] Helmholtz Zentrum München,Institute of Experimental Genetics, German Mouse Clinic
[2] German Research Center for Environmental Health,Institute of Experimental Genetics, Applied Computational Biology
[3] Helmholtz Zentrum München,Institute of Developmental Genetics
[4] German Research Center for Environmental Health,Chair of Experimental Genetics, TUM School of Life Sciences
[5] Helmholtz Zentrum München,Institute of Molecular Animal Breeding and Biotechnology, Gene Center
[6] German Research Center for Environmental Health,undefined
[7] German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD),undefined
[8] Technische Universität München,undefined
[9] Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München,undefined
来源
Mammalian Genome | 2023年 / 34卷
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摘要
Rare diseases (RDs) are a challenge for medicine due to their heterogeneous clinical manifestations and low prevalence. There is a lack of specific treatments and only a few hundred of the approximately 7,000 RDs have an approved regime. Rapid technological development in genome sequencing enables the mass identification of potential candidates that in their mutated form could trigger diseases but are often not confirmed to be causal. Knockout (KO) mouse models are essential to understand the causality of genes by allowing highly standardized research into the pathogenesis of diseases. The German Mouse Clinic (GMC) is one of the pioneers in mouse research and successfully uses (preclinical) data obtained from single-gene KO mutants for research into monogenic RDs. As part of the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) and INFRAFRONTIER, the pan-European consortium for modeling human diseases, the GMC expands these preclinical data toward global collaborative approaches with researchers, clinicians, and patient groups.
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页码:244 / 261
页数:17
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