4.2 Article

High Pathological Reproducibility of Diet-induced Atherosclerosis in Microminipigs via Cloning Technology

Journal

IN VIVO
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 2025-2033

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/invivo.12471

Keywords

Atherosclerosis; microminipig(TM); clone; somatic cell nuclear transfer

Funding

  1. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan [33361105]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Tokyo, Japan [AS2316907E]
  3. Suzuken Memorial Foundation
  4. SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation
  5. Grant of Shizuoka Prefecture

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The study found that F1 offspring and F1 clones fed with HcD showed similar results in serum lipid levels and systemic atherosclerosis to HcD-fed non-cloned microminipigs, indicating high reproducibility in atherogenesis.
Background/Aim: The reproducibility of atherosclerotic lesions was evaluated after the production of clonedmicrominipigs and their offspring. Materials and Methods: Cloned-microminipig-parents were produced by microminipigsomatic cell nuclei. These parents were crossbred and delivered males (F1-offspring) were divided into two groups: normal chow diet (NcD)-fed and high-fat/high-cholesterol diet (HcD)-fed groups. One of the F1-offsprings was subjected to cloning, and delivered males (F1-clones) were fed with HcD. After 8 weeks, all animals were necropsied for pathophysiological studies compared to non-cloned-microminipigs. Results: HcD-fed F1-offspring and F1-clones, but not NcDfed F1-offspring, exhibited increased serum lipid levels and systemic atherosclerosis, which were comparable to those of HcD-fed non-cloned-microminipigs. Homogeneity of variance analysis demonstrated that standard deviation values of serum lipoprotein and aortic atherosclerosis area from HcD-fed animals decreased in F1-offspring and F1-clones. Conclusion: HcD-induced atherogenesis was highly reproducible in F1 offsprings and F1-clones, indicating that the atherosclerosis prone genomic background was preserved in the clonedmicrominipigs, which can be used for studies on human atherosclerosis and related diseases.

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