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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Stroke. 2014 Jul 24;45(9):e179–e180. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.005639

Modelling immunity and inflammation in stroke: Differences between rodents and humans?

Frank R Sharp 1, Glen C Jickling 1
PMCID: PMC4215953  NIHMSID: NIHMS611827  PMID: 25061082

A recent article “Genomic responses in mouse models poorly mimic human inflammatory diseases” showed that among genes that changed significantly in humans, the murine orthologs were close to random in matching their human counterparts1. Though this study focused on sepsis, it also raises questions about how well the rodent inflammatory response corresponds to the human inflammatory response following ischemic stroke.

In this essay we argue that the peripheral inflammatory response in rodent ischemic stroke models is different than in human stroke. Given the important role of the immune system in stroke, this could be a major handicap in translating results in rodent stroke models to clinical trials in patients with stroke.

Leukocyte composition in blood differs considerably in humans compared to rodents. In humans ~50–60 % of leukocytes are neutrophils and 15–30% are lymphocytes. In contrast rats and mice have only 15–20% neutrophils and ~60% lymphocytes. The impact of such a difference in stroke is uncertain, though certainly noteworthy. Functional differences in the immune systems of rodents and humans also exist. For example, rodents are much more resistant to infections compared to humans following surgical procedures. This could be important since in humans infections are associated with stroke risk and stroke outcomes. Furthermore, rodent stroke models generally involve surgery which has major effects on the immune system. Since surgery does not occur in the majority of stroke patients this introduces additional inflammatory differences present in rodent stroke models not present in humans2.

Differences in the peripheral immune system between humans and rodents are also reflected by differences in whole genome messenger RNA (mRNA) and microRNA (miRNA) expression in leukocytes. Though hundreds of genes change expression in blood following ischemic stroke in rodents and humans, only a handful of these genes were the same2, 3. Similarly, even though changes of many miRNA are present in the blood of rodents, only a few of these miRNA are shared with the miRNA differentially expressed in the blood of patients with ischemic stroke4. This suggests that very little of the genomic immune response that occurs in human stroke is similar to that occurring in the rodent stroke model. These stroke findings are similar to the rodent sepsis models where the blood genomic responses in rodent sepsis failed to recapitulate the genomic responses in human sepsis1.

Inflammation in stroke also differs in rodents compared to humans because of the causes of stroke and vascular risk factors. The most common rodent stroke model involves using a nylon filament to occlude an intracranial vessel. Though reproducible, this does not model the major causes of human stroke which include large vessel atherosclerosis, cardioembolism (blood clot), and small vessel lacunar disease. Most rodent stroke studies do not include atherosclerosis, thromboembolism or small vessel disease in the models. Furthermore, the risk factors that predispose to such disease are generally not modeled including hypertension, diabetes, smoking and hyperlipidemia. Modeling the cause of stroke and associated vascular risk factors are likely important to model the immune system in human stroke given they profoundly affect the immune system. Indeed, large scale differences in immune cell gene expression are present between the different causes of human ischemic stroke5. Since atherosclerosis, cardioembolism and small vessel disease are not modeled in most rodent studies, the peripheral blood inflammatory responses in the rodent models would not be expected to be similar to humans.

Given the above considerations, we propose that the immune/ inflammatory molecules that are shared between rodent stroke models and human ischemic stroke may be most reasonable to study. Such molecules could initially be tested in rodent stroke models, with those showing robust effects evaluated further in primate or other animal stroke models to guide human stroke trials. In addition, it is important that rodent stroke models include atherosclerosis and/or thrombosis and/or small vessel disease and associated risk factors in order to better mimic the human condition.

It is not known if rodent stroke models can predict treatments for human stroke. The hundreds of rodent stroke studies that have failed to translate to humans argue that many aspects of the rodent stroke model are not applicable to human stroke. Rodent clotting may be one exception, since tPA was effective in rodent and rabbit stroke clot models, and did translate to a therapy that improves human ischemic stroke. However, it is not clear whether rodents are a good model of the human immune system in stroke. In fact, based on lack of success in animal sepsis models, nearly 150 clinical trials have been performed evaluating agents that block inflammatory response in critically ill patients and every one to date has failed1. Based upon similar numbers of failed trials in human stroke we suggest that the evidence indicates rodents are a poor model of the human inflammatory response, and other animal models should be used to study the inflammatory response and treatment relevant to human stroke. Notably most animals used for stroke models differ from humans in that they have a greater percentage of lymphocytes compared to neutrophils in peripheral blood including rats, mice, rabbits, sheep, macaques, baboons and rhesus monkeys. Only dogs and cats are similar to humans in that they have a significantly greater percentage of neutrophils compared to lymphocytes in peripheral blood. Clearly, more work needs to be done to define and develop the most appropriate animal model(s) for human stroke with respect to the immune system.

Supplementary Material

STR_STROKE-2014-005639.xml

Acknowledgments

Disclosures: Supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.

References

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Supplementary Materials

STR_STROKE-2014-005639.xml

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