During the past several years, there has been an increasing public awareness of mental illness and their societal and health consequences. Eating disorders represent one of the most damaging groups of mental illnesses. Current estimates are that anorexia nervosa claims the life of an astonishing 10-20% of patients, and increases mortality rate by 6-fold. Based on these figures, anorexia is the single most deadly mental illness1.

Another surprising fact about eating disorders is that risk of anorexia and bulimia appears to be about 50% attributable to genetics2. Despite this, there has been little progress toward identifying specific biological factors which are causal for eating disorders. There is good news, however, as some recent studies using animal models are beginning to provide much-needed insight into these complex and tragic illnesses.

Researchers from Columbia University have reported a mouse model that recapitulates many aspects of human anorexia nervosa, including patterns of disease onset and self-imposed dietary restriction (sometimes even to the point of death)3. Madra and Zeltser focused on several environmental and genetic factors which are believed contribute to anorexia. They found that by combining caloric restriction and social isolation in adolescent female mice carrying a BDNF-V66M mutation, they could generate anorexic behaviors. Around 40% of mice with all four of these risk factors displayed symptoms of anorexia nervosa. By systematically varying the environment and genetic factors, they were able to interrogate how each factor contributed to abnormal feeding behavior in their mice. For example, they found the BDNF-V66M genotype and caloric restriction significantly increased the anorexic behaviors, but only if feeding was restricted during a specific window of development. They also found that handling of the juvenile mice was able to extinguish anorexia, leading to healthy feeding.

Cyagen Biosciences can help you harness the experimental power of animal models in your own research. We provide custom mouse and rat models, including transgenic mice, conditional knockout mice, CRISPR-Pro and TALEN genome editing, as well as custom virus packaging, stem cells, and cell culture reagents.

References

  1. Arcelus J, Mitchell AJ, Wales J, Nielsen S. Mortality rates in patients with anorexia nervosa and other eating disorders. A meta-analysis of 36 studies. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2011 Jul;68(7):724-31.
  2. Trace SE, Baker JH, Peñas-Lledó E, Bulik CM. The genetics of eating disorders. Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2013;9:589-620.
  3. Madra M, Zeltser LM. BDNF-Val66Met variant and adolescent stress interact to promote susceptibility to anorexic behavior in mice. Transl Psychiatry. 2016 Apr 5;6:e776.

 

 

Generation of Custom Genetically Modified Animal Models:

TurboKnockout® Knockout Mice: ES cell mediated, As fast as 6 months, No off-target effects

CRISPR-Pro Knockout Mice: As fast as 3 months, Guaranteed germline transmitted F1 mice

Transgenic Mice: Quick turnaround time, High expression level

PiggyBac Transgenic Mice: More consistent expression, Defined region of integration, As fast as 3 months

CRISPR Knockin Mice: Large fragment up to 8kb, As fast as 4 months