Table 1.
Model | Genetics | Weight | Diet | Outcome of infection | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Genetic leptin knockout (ob/ob) | Spontaneous recessive, homozygous Lepob nonsense mutation | 45 g | Normal chow; hyperphagic due to loss of appetite control and satiety | Impaired viral clearance, increased risk of secondary infections, poor wound repair, and diminished memory responses | Campfield et al. 1995; Lutz and Woods 2012; Karlsson et al. 2017a; Meliopoulos et al. 2019 |
Genetic leptin receptor knockout (db/db) | Spontaneous mutant in Leprdb allele causing abnormal splicing | 40 g | Normal chow; hyperphagic due to loss of leptin receptor signal transduction | Reduced viral clearance, impaired adaptive immunity, and increased lung pathology | Lutz and Woods 2012; Radigan et al. 2014 |
Diet-induced obesity (DIO) | Some strains more susceptible than others | 35 g | High-fat, Western, or “cafeteria” diet | Mirrors genetically obese models, but generally moderate phenotypes between genetically obese and control models | Campfield et al. 1995; Smith et al. 2007; Lutz and Woods 2012; O'Brien et al. 2012; Zeeni et al. 2015 |
Control | Any matched genetic background | 25 g | Either low-fat diet or regular chow; diet choice may alter results | Controlled viral spread and replication, reduced lung pathology, improved wound repair, and robust antigenic memory | Lutz and Woods 2012; Zeeni et al. 2015 |
Adapted from data in Honce and Schultz-Cherry (2019).