Background: Heart attack and stroke are clinical consequences of
atherosclerosis, an inflammatory disease of arteries
initiated by lipid accumulation in the artery wall.
Current animal models for atherosclerosis primarily
use Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) and low density lipoprotein
receptor (LDLR) knockout mice, or hyperlipidemic rabbits..
Although these models are useful once lead compounds
are being tested, early assessment of new drug candidates
is impractical due to the cost, slow throughput, limitations
of post mortem analysis of lesions, and poor in-vivo
imaging technologies that typically require use of radioactive
tracers. An animal model that could provide reasonably
high throughput, where the development of atherosclerotic
lesions or their regression can be easily monitored
while the animal is still alive, would provide significant
improvement in the ability to obtain physiological information
about early stage candidate compounds.
Technology Description: UCSD researchers have developed a novel zebrafish model
useful for studying mechanisms of accumulation of lipid
in blood vessel walls and associated vascular inflammation.
This model uses a special diet enriched with cholesterol
and/or knockdown of zebrafish ApoE (homologous to human
and mouse ApoE) to trigger lipid accumulation in the
blood vessels and atherosclerosis The vessels and lipids
are easily visualized in the transparent zebrafish due
to fluorescent (green) vasculature and fluorescently
(red) labeled cholesterol. The model has been tested
with a cholesterol lowering drug and validated for reducing
cholesterol accumulation and vascular damage when the
drug is present.
ADVANTAGES
|
Cholesterol accumulation in zebrafish arteries. EGFPzebrafish larvae were fed a diet containing fluorescent (red) cholesterol ester for 7 days. A whole live zebrafish larva was placed under a confocal microscope to capture images of the vasculature. Green endothelial cells help trace blood vessels, which are stained red due to high cholesterol content in blood. Note bright red areas of the artery (arrowhead), which indicate cholesterol accumulation in the artery wall. |
|
Effect of anti-cholesterol drug. The addition of a commercially available cholesterol lowering drug in the fish tank water significantly reduced the level of cholesterol accumulated in the digestive system of a zebrafish, which was fed a high fat diet. |
Case No: SD2007-014
Inquiries To: invent@ucsd.edu