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AFAR's Grant Review Committee considers the following when
reviewing grant applications and assigning priority scores:
CHOICE OF HUMAN POPULATIONS
Careful methodology is critical in the conduct of research
on aging human populations. One of the most important considerations
is the confounding effects of disease.
Increasing age is often associated with increasing prevalence
of chronic conditions, such as heart disease, arthritis, or
dementia. Since these affect physiologic, mental and functional
abilities, measurements of such parameters may reflect the
consequences of age, disease, or both. Elderly research subjects,
therefore, usually need a careful diagnostic evaluation to
identify and ultimately control for the presence and extent
of chronic illness. For example, early research showed a significant
decline in cardiac output with age. However, in later studies,
when subjects were carefully screened and the analysis was
controlled for the presence of underlying heart disease, the
decrement was less than previously found; heart disease had
been a significant confounder.
In particular, studies which use "convenient" subjects, such
as institutionalized elderly, where the prevalence of disease
is high, or studies which recruit subjects from facilities
for the elderly, where the prevalence of disease is unknown,
should include evaluations of health status and disease prevalence,
in order to control for confounding and to ensure validity.
For current information and updates on Federal regulations
protecting human subjects who participate in research, link
to The Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) http://ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov
Principles Of Animal Use For Gerontological Research
Richard A. Miller1 and Nancy L. Nadon2
1Department of Pathology and Geriatrics Center, University of
Michigan School of Medicine, Institute of Gerontology, and Ann
Arbor VA Medical Center, Ann Arbor MI 48109 and 2National Institute
on Aging, Bethesda MD 20892
Abstract
This essay presents some practical advice and suggestions
for those who wish to use mice and rats in experiments on
the biology of aging. Ten principles set forth guidance on
choice of ages, choice of stocks, the importance of specific-pathogen-free
status, the uses of necropsy data, the dangers of pooling
samples from different individuals, planning ahead for loss
of aged mice to death and disease, the use of cost-adjusted
power calculations, and the dangers of inferring causal associations
from correlated age effects. A concluding executive summary
distills these tips into six bullets and 111 words.
List of abbreviations:
IL, interleukin
IL-2, Interleukin 2
NIA, National Institute on Aging
SPF, specific-pathogen free
This article is intended to convey some rules-of-thumb for
investigators just starting to think about the design of experiments
on aging using mice and rats. The principles stated below
reflect the opinions of the authors, based on years of experience
in rodent-based work in gerontology and molecular biology.
However, to avoid excessive circumlocution of the "in my opinion
it may be helpful to" variety, the style is deliberately imperative,
modeled on examples set by writers of style manuals (1) and
columns of advice for the lovelorn. In addition the word "mice"
will be used throughout to mean "mice and rats," except in
those cases where mice are different from rats.
First Principle: Don't use mice that are too old.
Many beginners ask for the oldest available mice for their
initial age effect study under the presumption that the old
ones will show bigger differences from young controls, and
thus produce significant results quicker. This is rarely a
good idea for several reasons:
(a) Old mice are usually sick (even if not quite dead yet).
If a trait differs from young controls only in the last 10%
of the cohort to drop off, then it's hard to be confident
that the change is a result of aging rather than of the advanced
disease or diseases most typical in the stock under study.
After all, the aging process, which creates decrepit old mice
from healthy, fit, young ones, takes many months to do this,
and age-dependent changes in many cells, tissue, and organ
systems can usually be demonstrated well before the median
survival time for the species or stock. If your assay shows
no change at 18, 22, 26, or 30 months of age (in a stock with
a median survival of 24 months), then demonstrating a change
in 34 month old animals may well be due to sickness per se.
Judicious selection of ages for initial exploratory work may
depend on the specific characteristics of the stock to be
used, and stocks with median survivals of 22 months or of
30 months may call for adjustments of ages selected for initial
examination.
(b) Old mice are very expensive, particularly if you want
them to be disease-free. The problem is that the real production
cost of mice rises not linearly with chronologic age, but
instead in proportion to the mortality rate, i.e. as an exponential
function of age. If half your mice live to age 24 months,
then producing a single 24 month old mouse requires you to
pay someone to house two mice for 24 months, one of which
has just died. If only 10% of the mice survive to age 32 months,
then the real cost of each 32 month old mouse is the cost
of raising 10 mice for anywhere from 18 to 32 months to get
the one alive at 32 months. And then that one mouse, when
you do the necropsy, may well turn out to have advanced neoplasia.
To illustrate the projected costs, at one well-known Midwestern
Medical Center, animal users are charged $0.58/cage/day for
cages of 4 mice. At this price it costs $106 to grow a mouse
for two years; but because half the mice die, the cost of
a live 2 year old mouse is twice as high, or about $212. Because
half of the two-year old mice are found to have advanced neoplasia
even at a cursory necropsy, the cost of a more-or-less tumor-free
2 year old mouse is another two-fold higher, or $414. The
nominal cost of a 32 month old mouse (at $0.58/cage/day) is
$140, but adjusting for attrition and disease gives a real
cost closer to $1,400 each.
The NIA Office of Biological Resources provides highly subsidized
animals, even with the recent price increase; for a two-year
old C57BL/6 mouse, for example, the cost charged to investigators
is a mere $72, well under the local production cost. The real
subsidy (production cost minus cost to you) rises exponentially
with age, however, and therefore it costs much more to raise
a very old mouse in one's own facility than it does to buy
them from NIA. While NIA continues to raise these very old
mice, despite their exceptionally high cost, in order to provide
investigators maximal flexibility in designing their experimental
protocols, investigators who do use this scarce resource are
still confronted with the problems imposed by their very high
rates of concurrent illness.
Second Principle: don't use mice that are too young.
The beginner also begs for the youngest possible controls,
often just weaned, again on the grounds that these are more
likely to show big differences from old mice. The catch is
that these mice are no more typical of "young adults" than,
say, your typical nine-year old human person. Even 2-3 month
old mice, the biological equivalent of teen-agers and college
freshmen, i.e. technically postpubertal but hardly adult,
are still in the throes of complex maturational changes we
may wish to distinguish from the aging process. Although differences
between 2 month old and 5 month old mice may be well worth
studying, and in some cases may be highly relevant to aging
(thymic involution, for example, is well advanced by 5 months
of age), a conservative strategy might be to use mice aged
4-6 months as the "young" control group in experimental comparisons.
Third Principle: don't use too few age groups. It
is certainly cheaper to do your initial survey experiment
with only two age groups, e.g. 6 and 24 months, but there
are major risks of missing interesting effects, and equal
risks of reporting positive results whose significance would
be routinely mis-interpreted without data on intermediate
ages. Figure 1 shows some hypothetical situations of this
kind, in which the inclusion of one or more intermediate age
groups radically alters the picture that would have been obtained
by study of extreme ages only.
The take-home message is: if you start out knowing nothing
about the effects of age on your measurement of interest,
try an initial survey from young adult to the median survival
age, say 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of age for most strains.
If there really is no change between 6 and 24 months of age,
then you're welcomed to look at older animals, but remember
that the older they get, the more likely it is that any effect
you're seeing reflects the diseases and debilities that are
likely to kill the mice in a few more months.
Fourth Principle: the mice must be specific pathogen free,
and you have to be able to prove it. Specific pathogen
free (SPF) colonies are not free of all disease, and are not
free of all infectious agents, but they are free of a well-defined
group of known murine (or ratoid) pathogens that routinely
plague the old-fashioned "conventional" mouse colony. The
most common mouse pathogens endemic in conventional colonies
are Sendai virus, coronavirus (mouse hepatitis virus), and
pinworm, while rat colonies are most often infected with sialodacryoadenitis
virus, Sendai, and Mycoplasma pulmonis (Robert Dysko, DVM,
personal communication). The methods required for maintenance
of an SPF rodent vivarium are beyond the scope of this handbook,
and are well reviewed elsewhere (2). Key steps include: never
allowing in animals, from any source, that have not been proven
to be SPF; never taking animals out of the colony and allowing
them to return; never allowing visitors, even site visitors
and deans, to enter the colony; never letting anyone into
the colony who does not need to be there; and the routine
but obsessive use of precautions like gloves, gowns, and shoe
covers. Some facilities use an expensive barrier system, in
which each room has a clean door (through which supplies and
clean personnel enter) and a dirty door (through which used
cages leave). Others have almost equal luck with commercially
available single-cage filter bonnets that greatly reduce the
risk of cage-to-cage transmission of airborne microbes.
These operating procedures, while necessary, are not sufficient
to earn the right to refer to your colony as SPF; the colony
must be proven to be free of key pathogens by routine testing
of surveillance mice, for example on a quarterly basis. A
minimal surveillance program involves introducing several
cages of new mice, without filter bonnets, into each room
every three months, using a stock (CD-1, for example) known
to be susceptible to many common pathogens. These mice are
then tested after 90 days, a period of time sufficient to
allow them to become infected by anything in circulation,
and to have developed antibodies to the infectious agent.
The mice are then euthanized, examined carefully for evidence
of intestinal and external parasites, and their sera tested
(often by a commercial laboratory) for evidence of anti-viral
antibodies specific for the agents of interest. Periodic histopathological
analysis is also recommended. If all tests come back negative,
then you can call the colony SPF. Positive responses should
induce a panicky feeling and a vigorous re-testing effort,
and repeat positives usually require that the entire affected
colony be discarded and re-derived.
If this surveillance system is not practicable in a given
institutional vivarium, a useful alternative is to keep a
small number of weanlings from breeding cage until they are
about 3 months old and then to send these to a commercial
facility for testing. Since the breeding pairs are usually
long-term residents of the facility, and newborn pups are
particularly sensitive to infection, this procedure is more
sensitive than buying mice and allowing them to simply to
reside in the colony for a few months without contact with
the local residents. The optimal situation for maintaining
an SPF colony combines the use of filter bonnets with the
use of sentinel mice. Since filters work very well in preventing
spread of airborne pathogens, exposure of the sentinel animals
to potentially infectious agents requires a procedure in which
the used bedding from a pool of cages be thoroughly mixed,
and then added to the cages containing the sentinels. (A policemouse's
life is not a happy one.) Sentinels who put up with this treatment
for several months are then volunteered for necropsy and serological
analysis. In these circumstances a stray positive result may
not require sacrifice of the entire colony, since it is more
likely that the infection has been confined to one or two
cages; detailed follow-up studies may document good health
for the majority of mice in the room. To be effective, this
system requires good record-keeping in order to trace all
cages that a sentinel has had contact with.
Why go through this hassle? "After all," the scientist stuck
with a conventional colony might rationalize, "people are
not free of all infectious agents; I'm just trying to more
closely mimic the real world situation." The basic problem
is that the intensity, variety and prevalence of infection
in any given conventional colony may well change from month
to month and year to year, and is likely to differ greatly
from one colony to another. Because many infections can alter
a mouse's immune, hepatic, endocrine, digestive, pulmonary,
and neurological responses, studies carried out on conventional
colonies can prove very difficult to reproduce in another,
or even in the same, laboratory. In some cases allegations
of age effects on variables of interest have proven to occur
only in conventional colonies (3), and are thus likely to
reflect unsuspected influences of one or more uncharacterized
infectious agents than of aging itself. Most effects of this
kind doubtless go undetected, since few workers routinely
use mice from two distinct colonies, one conventional and
the other SPF, but it seems likely that many of the unnerving
conflicts among reports in the gerontological literature may
reflect variations in colony pathogen status.
Successful maintenance of an SPF colony also requires sufficient
discipline to prevent the importation of new mouse stocks
from uncertified suppliers. A well-run colony will usually
permit unfettered importation of mice from only a very small
number of commercial vendors, vendors that routinely submit
clean bills of health with all shipments. A request for permission
to bring in animals from an uncertified vendor or another
research institution should trigger a process in which the
sender is required to document the health status of the animals,
and in which even allegedly clean animals are kept in a separate
quarantine facility (or building) until tested locally for
pathogens before they or their offspring are introduced into
the general population. Importation of a stock that cannot
be proven specific pathogen-free ordinarily requires long-term
quarantine or rederivation of the stock by caesarian delivery
and foster nursing.
Two common mistakes: Scenario #1 - the vivarium manager
tells you it's an SPF colony, because the facility only buys
from SPF suppliers. So why spend the money to test this? Four
years ago, however, your technician visited a pet store on
the way to work and every cage has had Sendai for four years
- your laboratory mice are about as SPF as the ones in your
basement. Test quarterly, and you can proudly report the clean
bill of health in every paper and every grant proposal.
Scenario #2 - you have a conventional colony, and you're
not proud of it, but you buy the SPF mice from NIA and let
them sit in the colony for just a week or two before use.
This approach, which is remarkably common, just about guarantees
that the mice used in your tests are infected with something;
blessed with an SPF upbringing, they have no protective antibody
titers, and are thus sitting ducks for whatever virus happens
to be in your colony during their initiation into the tough
realities of real world infection. Even if the mice will be
housed in the animal facility short-term, it is well worthwhile
to use an SPF facility or at least a quarantine room and filter
bonnets.
Scenario #2b: it is not a good idea to try to sneak past
this problem by using the mice the day they arrive off the
delivery van. Shipping is very tough on mice, and the stress
has an impact on adrenal size, steroid hormone levels, immunity,
and other organ. No one would write a protocol that began
"Prior to their use in experiments, the mice were placed in
a shipping container without access to their usual sources
of food and water, and then flown 1000 miles in a dark, cold,
noisy plane, followed by interstate truck shipment". It's
a good idea to let the mice sit after arrival, for at least
a week or preferably two, before use. But do it in an SPF
colony.
Fifth Principle: Don't bet the farm on C57BL/6 mice.
Don't bet it on F344 rats, either. Inbred strains, developed
over the last 80 years for their usefulness in transplantation
and cancer research, have become the de facto standard strains
for research in most other areas, including aging. Sixty percent
of the rats ordered from the NIA colony are of the F344 stock,
despite the well-known problems with this strain (4), and
40% of the mice used are C57BL/6. The F1 hybrid mice, which
in some respects have much to recommend them when compared
to inbred animals, account for only 15% of the mouse orders.
This is a shame, whose implications for aging research have
been reviewed in detail elsewhere (4-6). In brief, the case
against inbreds includes the following counts:
- All mice in an inbred stock are genetically identical.
It's therefore impossible to be certain that conclusions
based on an inbred stock will apply equally to any other
inbred stock without doing the study all over again.
- Inbred stocks are not only homogeneous, they are also
weird, debilitated, and short lived. Creation of an inbred
stock involves forced homozygosity at all loci. This is
a highly selective process, because the inbreeding process
frequently creates genotypes that impair viability and fertility;
in fact, most brother-sister mated families eventually die
out, with the few surviving families becoming the "standard"
inbred lines we all know and love. F1 hybrids created by
a cross between two different inbred lines are almost invariably
longer-lived than either of the two parents (7), consistent
with the notion that the homozygous condition produces an
animal of lower quality. Many inbred lines are famed for
properties that clearly count as strain-specific oddities:
the chronic renal disease and high lymphoma incidence of
the F344 rat, the 100% incidence of thymic lymphoma in the
AKR/J mouse, the near 100% incidence of reticulum cell sarcoma
in SJL/J mice, and many other similar peculiarities. Table
1 shows a series of anecdotes: the take-home message is
that individual inbred lines may have a very high incidence
of lesions that are rarely seen in other inbred lines. These
obvious illnesses, and other idiosyncrasies less obvious
to the naked eye, could in principle wreak havoc on the
process by which general conclusions are inferred from a
limited data set. In some cases, of course, genetic identity
is critical to the experimental plan; these situations include
protocols that involve transfer of tissues from one mouse
to another, and those where the goal of the study involves
analyses of inter-strain variation. But in many other instances
the use of an inbred strain reflects mere custom rather
than a careful decision among alternatives. To read more
along these lines, check out (5).
So what is a gerontologist to do? There are a number of
possible pathways through the current difficulties:
(a) If you have to use genetically homogeneous animals, prefer
F1 hybrids to inbred mice. Although each individual F1 stock
is genetically uniform, at least you've ducked the homozygosity
problem, and F1 mice are in general longer-lived, hardier
beasts.
(b) Replicate key findings in multiple stocks. Once you've
invested three years in proving something in CB6F1 mice, it
may seem a waste of time to spend another few months checking
the main points in two other F1 lines, but in the long run
this may be more productive than spending the rest of your
career chasing a finding that turns out only to apply to CB6F1.
(c) Consider the use of an animal stock with controlled
heterogeneity, such as mice bred by a four way cross (Example:
CB6F1 mothers crossed to C3D2F1 fathers). Such a cross yields
an arbitrarily large group of full sibs; no two mice are genetically
identical, but each mouse shares half of its genetic code
with any other randomly chosen animal in the pool. There is
a slowly growing literature demonstrating the usefulness of
such heterogeneous lines in aging research, and the NIA Office
of Biological Resources plans to add such mice to their contract
colonies soon.
Sixth Principle: Do at least a quickie autopsy on each
old mouse; if you can afford it, pay a pro to do a gross necropsy.
Even a pathological novice can take a quick look: is the spleen
three times normal size? Are there little white bumps in the
lung or liver? Battle-scars, probably infected, on the backs
and legs? Skipping this precaution may make it easier to call
the mice "apparently healthy" in the materials and methods
section, but at the cost of making the results much harder
to replicate and interpret. Tumors are common in aged rodents,
and small tumors may not pose a problem for many experiments.
However, as a rule, the simplest, and in some ways the best,
plan is to toss out the data from mice that have large lesions
- though of course this can be a very expensive rule to follow,
particularly if you've ignored the First Principle.
Having a look yourself is better than not looking, but better
still is to give the animal, after you've taken the tissue
you need, to a veterinary pathologist or technician and ask
them to have a look. This is fairly inexpensive, you get the
written report back in a few weeks, and then you can go back
through your notes and discard the data that came from the
ones later found to have a serious illness.
Best of all is a histopathological autopsy. A thorough job
costs $50 - $100/case; a quick microscopic look at the obvious
lesions can cut the cost to $25 or so. This is very important
if you are characterizing a new model (does the drug you administer
to prevent neurodegeneration increase the incidence of liver
abnormalities?). But if your main goal is to eliminate data
from sick mice, the gross inspection is often adequate and
much cheaper.
An alternate, more informative, approach would be to consider
whether the presence of a specific form of illness modifies
the age effect or treatment effect under study. Limited statistical
power - are the differences between tumor-ridden and tumor-free
mice big enough to be worth separate analysis? - and the difficulties
of deciding the extent to which similar disease states can
safely be lumped together can greatly complicate this variety
of analysis. In any case it is important for the investigator
to state explicitly the criteria used for elimination (or
stratification) of individual animals, and the proportion
of animals the met the inclusion criteria.
At what ages is the yield worth the cost? This will vary
from strain to strain, and if you find that 95% of your 16
month old mice are free of lesions that might compromise your
interpretation, then you may want to skip paying for the gross
inspections and do it yourself. As a rule of thumb, we try
to get a gross necropsy on mice over 18 months and rats 24
months or older. Your mileage may vary.
Seventh principle: Don't pool unless you absolutely have
to.There are two potential problems with pooling cells
and tissues. The first is that pooling rapidly increases the
chance that the cells or tissues under study contain abnormal
cells from a diseased subject. In a study of immunity, for
example, the inclusion of even a fairly small proportion of
lymphoma cells in a pool of otherwise normal cells may strongly
influence the result of the analysis. If sick mice make up
1/3rd of the population, each pool of 5 mice is very likely
(83%) to include at least one diseased animal.
The second issue is a statistical one: the assessment of
a statistical hypothesis ("mice aged 18 months express, on
average, more of this gene than mice aged 6 months") depends
on the number of individual mice, or pools of mice, tested
independently. Thus an experiment in which a pool of 20 young
mice is compared to a pool of 20 old mice has no greater statistical
power than an experiment comparing one young to one old animal,
i.e. none at all. The fewer mice used in each pool (ideally
one mouse per pool), the more statistical power is achieved
for the available mouse budget. Putting in the extra effort
to miniaturize your test system to the point where it can
be performed with material from a single mouse pays off handsomely
in the long run.
Eighth Principle: buy extra old mice to compensate for
death and disease. If you need 20 mice aged 24 months,
don't buy 20 mice aged 24 months, because when you get around
to using them 2 months later you'll have 18 live ones, of
which only 10 will be free of visible lesions at necropsy.
If you want 20 mice at age 24 months, buy 30 mice at age 22
months; use them 2 - 6 weeks later and discard the ones with
lesions.
Ninth Principle: Do a cost-adjusted power analysis and
save a bundle. OK, you know how to do a power analysis.
You call the local statistician, and indicate that you're
trying to figure out if male mice have more muscles than female
mice, and that the three males you've tested so far have 1200
ug worth of the muscle in question, with a standard deviation
of 200 mg, and that you'd consider it worth knowing if the
sex difference were as great as 200 mg, so how many mice do
you need to use? Would 10 of each group do the trick? The
statistician plugs the values into a secret program, and tells
you that if you use a p < 0.05 criterion for significance
(and who wouldn't?), then with N = 10 per group you've got
only a 58% chance of getting a significant result if the real
difference is 200 mg. To get an 80% chance of detecting a
difference of 200 mg, you're going to need to include 17 mice
in each group. You then go out and buy some extra mice.
OK, next you want to know if the size of this muscle varies
with age rather than with gender. So you do the same calculation,
and get the same result: to get 80% power for detecting a
difference between young and old of 200 mg, given the same
assumptions above, you're going to need 17 young mice and
17 old mice. You go out and buy these 34 mice; actually you
buy 17 young and more than 17 old, since some of the old animals
will have to be discarded when you find out they have tumors.
Mistake: you've just wasted some money. The power analysis
was done to calculate the minimum number of animals, but what
you really want to do is get the maximal amount of statistical
power per dollar spent. Because the old mice cost a lot more
than the young ones, the cheapest way to get this statistical
power is to buy slightly fewer old mice, and a good deal more
young ones. If, for example, the cost of studying each young
mouse (purchase cost plus cost of doing the assay) is $18,
and the cost of studying each old mouse is $106, then the
optimal solution is to buy 29 young mice and 12 old ones.
If you buy 17 of each, you'll spend $2108; if you buy 29 plus
12, you spend $1797. You can allocate the $311 to the next
experiment, or give your tech a well-earned raise.
Actually, the real savings can be very high indeed, particularly
if you have to grow the mice yourself rather than obtain them
from the NIA's highly subsidized colonies, and particularly
if you count in the cost of the mice you couldn't use because
they had serious disease. The real cost of a two year old
mouse is not $106, but the $212 you spent to grow two of them,
the one that died last week and one you've still got, or often
the $424 you need to spend to get a tumor-free mouse. At $424
per old mouse, the minimal cost is to study 50 young and 10
old mice, at a cost of $5,242 and a savings of $2,272. At
the NIA subsidized cost, you'll pay a mere $72 a head for
the old mice, or $144 per tumor-free old mouse, and $22 per
young one; so you'll save a mere $454 - less cost, and less
savings than the home-grown variety, but still worth the cost
of writing down the following formulas, which were derived
by Andrzej Galecki of the University of Michigan's Geriatrics
Center and Institute of Gerontology:
NY = 0.5 * Ne * (1 + SQRT(CO/CY)
NO = 0.5 * Ne * (1 + SQRT(CY/CO)
Here's what to do: first do the regular old power analysis,
that tells you have many mice you'll need if you use equal
numbers of mice in each group. This was Ne = 17 mice per group
in the example shown above. Then figure out how much it costs
to do the assay for each young mouse, including purchase costs,
supply costs, tech time, overhead; this number is CY, the
cost per young mouse. Calculate CO, the cost per old mouse,
in the same way, and be sure to throw in the adjustment for
the number of mice you'll need to discard for disease. Then
plug in the values and calculate NY, the number of young mice
to buy, and NO, the number of old mice to buy.
Tenth Principle: don't misinterpret artifactual correlations
due to age effects. This isn't really a principle of animal
use, because it applies with equal force to studies of human
aging, but the error is so common that it's worth noting in
this context. Consider, for example, a hypothetical situation
in which an investigator is interested in testing the hypothesis
that the relatively low ability of T cells from old mice to
secrete Interleukin-2 contributes to their low ability to
make antibodies when injected with tumor cells. The investigator
tests a group of mice, containing equal numbers of old and
young animals, for both IL-2 and antibody production, and
obtains the results shown in the left panel of Figure 2. He
interprets this as good support for the idea that low IL-2
levels are indeed associated with poor antibody production,
and since he knows from prior work that T cells from old mice
do indeed make less IL-2 than cells from young mice, he concludes
that the low IL-2 levels may underlie the poor antibody production.
The error in this inference is that the correlation between
IL-2 and antibody production could well reflect the common
influence on aging on both outcomes, rather than any direct
connection between IL-2 production and antibody responses.
The righthand panel of Figure 2 shows the same data set, but
with triangles used to indicate the data from the old mice
and circles to show data from young donors. Within
each group, there is no correlation between IL-2 and antibody,
and the impression of a correlation conveyed by the first
figure reflects the age influence on both traits. The older
mice may also, compared to young animals, have more cataracts,
weaker muscles, and a preference for classical music over
grunge rock; plots of these measures against IL-2 production
in a mixed-age group will also show excellent correlations
that do not have tell us much about causal relationships.
Executive Summary:
- Use youngish mice for your "old" groups, and use older
young adults instead of adolescents as young controls. Use
some mice in the middle range, too.
- Make sure they're specific pathogen-free, and free of
the most obvious tumors and other significant diseases.
- Try not to pool unless absolutely necessary.
- Don't put clean SPF rodents into a conventional colony;
the power of prayer, though redoubtable in some earthly
domains, does not always fully prevent infections in rodents.
- Shake the inbred habit - this is not your father's rodent.
Pick F1s if you have to use genetically homogeneous stocks,
and make sure to confirm your key findings in multiple strains.
Acknowledgements: The preparation of this
article was supported, in part, by NIA grants AG08808 and
AG13283. The ideas presented represent the opinions of the
authors, but were formulated in part during conversations
with many colleagues, particularly David Harrison, Andrzej
Galecki, Robert Dysko, and Bennett Cohen.
Table 1: Disease Incidence in Inbred Rodents: Some Sobering
Anecdotes
| Strain |
Disease |
Age |
Incidence |
Citation |
| C3H/He |
Hepatoma |
14 |
85% |
(8) |
| A/He |
Pulmonary Adenoma |
18 |
90% |
(8) |
| BALB/c |
Lymphoma |
13 |
44% |
(8) |
| SJL/J |
Reticulum cell sarcoma |
13 |
91% |
(8) |
| C57BR |
Pituitary tumor |
"old" |
33% |
(8) |
| BALB/c female |
Ovarian granulosa tumor |
?? |
76% |
(8) |
|
|
|
|
|
| F344 male |
Leydig cell tumor |
24 |
99% |
(8) |
| F344 |
glomerulonephropathy |
27 |
>90% |
(9) |
> |
|
|
|
|
| (AxB6)F1 |
At least one neoplasm |
18-24 |
25% |
(10) |
|
|
30-35 |
70% |
(10) |
|
|
36-41 |
94% |
10 |
Moral 1: if you need 25 "disease-free" old inbred or hybrid
mice, you had better obtain >> 25 mice.
Moral 2: Aged animals of Strain A may differ in known and
unknown ways from those in Strain B, due in part to disease
effects.
Legends to figures:
1. Some reasons to include middle-aged animals in a survey
experiment. Panel A shows the hypothetical results of a study
looking at three interleukins in the blood of young and old
rats. The authors conclude that all three interleukins decline
in parallel with aging - perhaps they share some common control
mechanism on which one could base a Program Project application?
Panel B shows a more comprehensive survey of the same topic
conducted at another laboratory: IL-X drops early in adult
life (a maturational effect), IL-Y shows a progressive decline
through the lifespan, and IL-Z drops only when the animals
get ill in very old age. Panel C shows three hypothetical
reports of age effects on Ig-X levels in serum. Lab #1 says
there's no change; Lab #2 says the levels go down; Lab #3
says the levels go up. Panel D shows the real hypothetical
data set from which each lab drew its misleading conclusion:
use of a wider and higher resolution set of age groups would
have avoided much embarrassment and needless confusion.
2. Misleading inferences from age-confounded correlations.
This hypothetical data set represents an attempt to test the
idea that the low levels of IL-2 production seen in old mice
contribute to poor antibody production in these mice. Unsophisticated
investigators might conclude, from the left panel, that there
is indeed a strong correlation between IL-2 production (already
known to decline with age) and antibody production, and thus
claim that their hypothesis is supported. The right panel,
showing old and young individuals separately, reveals the
fallacy: the correlation results from the high age-sensitivity
of both measured traits. Any two traits strongly influenced
by aging would generate a similar correlation, even if neither
trait had any direct mechanistic relation to the other.

Figure 1: Some reasons to include middle-aged animals in a
survey experiment. Panel A shows the hypothetical results
of a study looking at three interleukins in the blood of young
and old rats. The authors conclude that all three interleukins
decline in parallel with aging - perhaps they share some common
control mechanism on which one could base a Program Project
application? Panel B shows a more comprehensive survey of
the same topic conducted at another laboratory: IL-X drops
early in adult life (a maturational effect), IL-Y shows a
progressive decline through the lifespan, and IL-Z drops only
when the animals get ill in very old age. Panel C shows three
hypothetical reports of age effects on Ig-X levels in serum.
Lab #1 says there's no change; Lab #2 says the levels go down;
Lab #3 says the levels go up. Panel D shows the real hypothetical
data set from which each lab drew its misleading conclusion:
use of a wider and higher resolution set of age groups would
have avoided much embarrassment and needless confusion.
Figure 2: Misleading inferences from age-confounded correlations.
This hypothetical data set represents an attempt to test the
idea that the low levels of IL-2 production seen in old mice
contribute to poor antibody production in these mice. Unsophisticated
investigators might conclude, from the left panel, that there
is indeed a strong correlation between IL-2 production (already
known to decline with age) and antibody production, and thus
claim that their hypothesis is supported. The right panel,
showing old and young individuals separately, reveals the
fallacy: the correlation results from the high age-sensitivity
of both measured traits. Any two traits strongly influenced
by aging would generate a similar correlation, even if neither
trait had any direct mechanistic relation to the other.
Literature Cited:
- Fowler HW. A Dictionary of Modern English Usage. 2nd
ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1965.
- Clough G. Suggested guidelines for the housing and husbandry
of rodents for aging studies. Neurobiol. Aging 12:653-658,
1991.
- Florini JR. Limitations of interpretation of age-related
changes in hormone levels: illustration by effects of thyroid
hormones on cardiac and skeletal muscle. J. Gerontol. 44:B107-B1091989.
- Weindruch R, Masoro EJ. Concerns about rodent models for
aging research. J. Gerontol. Biol. Sci. 46:B87-B881991.
- Weindruch R: Animal Models; in Masoro EJ (ed): Handbook
of Physiology Section 11: Aging. New York, Oxford University
Press, 1995, pp 37-52.
- Miller RA, Austad S, Burke D, et al: Exotic mice as models
for aging research: polemic and prospectus. Neurobiol.Aging
1998; (in press)
- Smith GS, Walford RL, Mickey MR. Lifespan and incidence
of cancer and other diseases in selected long-lived inbred
mice and their F1 hybrids. J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 50:1195-1213,
1967.
- Altman PL, Katz DD: Inbred and Genetically Defined Strains
of Laboratory Animals. Part 1: Mouse and Rat. Bethesda,
MD, Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology,
1979.
- Maeda H, Gleiser CA, Masoro EJ, et al. Nutritional influences
on aging of Fischer 344 rats: II. Pathology. J. Gerontol.
40:671-688, 1985.
- Wolf NS, Giddens WE, Martin GM. Life table analysis and
pathologic observations in male mice of a long-lived hybrid
strain (Af X C57BL/6)F1. J. Gerontol. Biol. Sci. 43:B71-B781988.
ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR USE OF RODENTS
IN AGING EXPERIMENTS
To execute a meaningful study with mammalian models, life
table data are often very helpful, particularly if the study
focuses on a species not frequently used in aging research.
The specific ages to be studied depend upon the question being
asked. Sometimes aging studies need to include an age group
older than the median length of life, particularly if the
goal is to study a condition that arises only very late in
the life course. Often, however, it is more useful to include
somewhat younger animals as the oldest set of test subjects,
in order to avoid the complex issues of disease and selection
effects. Desciptive studies, in which the goal is to determine
how a particular trait alters with age, should include at
least three adult age groups, and preferably more In mice,
which are considered adult at age 3 months and typically survive
26 - 30 months, a design might include ages 6, 14, and 20
months of age. Depending on the study, it may also be pertinent
to study animals during the developmental period of life.
Since disease can distort an aging study, it is also necessary
to know the disease status of the animals. When designing
a study, the literature should be reviewed on the age-associated
pathological lesions that occur in the species or strain chosen.
During the course of a study, the animal colony should be
monitored for infectious disease and the animals used for
experimental work should be analyzed for pathological lesions.
Diet markedly affects aging processes and age-associated
disease processes. Therefore, the composition of the diet
used in aging studies must be known if the research findings
are to be reproduced by other investigators.
With respect to the proposed use of animals, specific areas
of concern in the review of grant applications are:
- Documentation of compliance with applicable laws and
guidelines. Applicants should provide assurance of compliance
with applicable laws and guidelines, such as indicating
that the animal facilities are (1) accredited by the American
Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care
(AAALAC), or (2) that an institutional animal welfare assurance
statement is on file and has been accepted by the Office
of Protection from Research Risks (OPRR) at the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), or (3) that the proposed research
has been reviewed for humane use of the animals by the host
institutions Animal Care and Use Committee.
- Justification for the choice of species. The choice of
species to be used should be justified, based on criteria
of relevance and appropriateness. Relevant criteria include
any specific application or comparison of time-dependent
maturational or senescent change(s) in the animal to the
same or similar change(s) in human subjects. Appropriateness
criteria include any specific genetic, anatomical, physiological
or behavioral attribute(s) that document the suitability
of a species for a particular area of research. The availability
and cost of the animals, ease of maintenance and availability
of background information about the species are additional
criteria that mark the appropriateness of the choice of
species.
- Adequacy of differentiation of aging, development and
disease in relation to the proposed research. Scientific
and practical issues should be addressed that relate to
how the study will distinguish between aging, development
and disease. Applicants should define their use of such
terms as "young", "mature", "old", or "senescent", in relation
to the life span of the species they propose to use. The
rationale for selecting a particular range of age groups
should be explained, with the objective of ensuring that
the results speak to issues of "aging", the process that
converts young adults into comparatively frail and disease-prone
adults, as opposed to "development", the process that converts
a fertilized egg into a young adult. Applicants should address
the potential or actual impact of spontaneous age-associated
pathological changes in the animals on the attainment of
their specific research aims. Finally, measures to monitor
the health status of the animals and to ensure their freedom
from complicating infectious disease also should be specified.
Most of the information needed to address these issues can
be found in the December 1991 issue of Neurobiology of Aging,
which is dedicated to the care and use of animal models for
aging research as well as the article Principles Of Animal
Use For Gerontological Research listed below.
AFAR GUIDELINES ON DIETARY RESTRICTIONS
FOR RODENTS
The antiaging actions in rats and mice of dietary restriction
(DR) are primarily die to the reduced intake of energy. Therefore,
any dietary regime that reduces energy intake without causing
malnutrition due to the deficiency of a nutrient should be
satisfactory. In most DR studies, a 40% reduction in energy
intake below that of the ad libitum fed is used. This level
of energy restriction causes about a 35% to 50% increase in
longevity when instituted at or soon after weaning. It also
increases longevity significantly when initiated early in
adult life. However, the effects of DR are influenced by the
sex and strain of mouse or rat. Therefore, if the influence
of DR on the longevity of a given sex and strain is not available
in the published literature, the investigator may wish to
determine this by executing a longevity study. However, such
information has been published for most of the commonly used
mouse and rat strains.
In order to determine the energy intake of each animal, it
is necessary to individually house the animals, and most studies
have done so, but there is growing evidence that group-housed
rodents will also show life span extension when subjected
to a calorie-restricted diet. Energy restriction can be achieved
by reducing the daily allotment of food by 40% (when doing
so, it is wise to feed the animals just before the dark phase
of the light cycle if circadian rhythms are to be minimally
disturbed). DR can also be achieved by every other day feeding
or by other procedures which limit the time of access to food
(when such procedures are used; it is most important to measure
the food intake of both ad libitum fed and DR singly housed
animals). Detailed information about DR can be found in :
Weindruch, R.H. and Walford, R.L. (1988). The retardation
of Aging and Disease by Dietary Restriction. Springfield,
IL : C.C. Thomas.
AFAR GUIDELINES ON NEPHROPATHY
Nephropathy is of common occurrence in most rat strains and
is a greater problem in males than in females. The severity
of the lesions increases with increasing age. Rats fed ad
libitum diets containing animal proteins such as casein and
lactalbumin progress to such severe lesions that kidney failure
is the cause of the spontaneous death of many animals. The
use of soy protein instead of animal proteins reduces the
severity of nephropathy. Dietary restriction almost totally
prevents the occurrence of severe lesions. The extent of the
problem in a given animal can be monitored after sacrifice
or spontaneous death by histopathologic examination and during
life by measuring blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine
levels. A detailed discussion of nephropathy in rats and ways
of preventing it can be found in : Shimokawa, I., Higami,
Y., Hubbard, G.B., McMahan, C.A., Masoro, E.J. and Yu, B.P.
Diet and the suitability of the male Fischer 344 rat as a
model for aging research. J. Gerontol. : Biol. Sci. 48:B27-32,
1993.
|