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. 2022 Jan 6;118(15):3016–3051. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvab370

Table 6.

Examples of animal models of inherited cardiac diseases and animal-free innovations

Species Pathological features Applications Animal-free alternatives
Mouse, zebrafish, Drosophila
  • Targeted deletion or transgenic overexpression of genes identified in human genetic studies, including GWAS

  • Refinement

  • Study relevance of a specific gene

  • Prove causality

  • Gain novel mechanistic insight

  • Targeted deletion or overexpression in hiPSC-CMs

  • Replacement and reduction

Mouse, zebrafish, rabbit, pig
  • Transgenic animals overexpressing mutant proteins identified in patients with inherited cardiomyopathies and channelopathies

  • Refinement

  • Study relevance of a specific gene mutation

  • Study disease progression

  • Prove causality

  • Gain novel mechanistic insight

  • Therapeutic studies

  • Introduce mutation in heterologous expression systems, hiPSC-CMs

  • Replacement and reduction

Mouse, zebrafish, pig
  • CRISPR/Cas9-induced gene mutation

  • Further refinement compared to transgenic models

Mimicking heterozygous and homozygous mutations as present in cardiomyopathy patients
  • CRISPR/Cas9-induced gene mutations in hiPSC-CMs, and patient-derived iPSC-CMs

  • Replacement and reduction

Rat, cat, dog
  • Spontaneous cardiomyopathy

  • Refinement and reduction

  • Study disease progression

  • Gain novel mechanistic insight

  • Therapeutic studies

  • Introduce mutation in heterologous expression systems, hiPSC-CMs

  • Replacement and reduction

All animal models enable in vivo/ex vivo/in vitro analysis of (electro)physiology, histology, and molecular biology. Abbreviations: GWAS, genome-wide association studies; hiPSC-CMs, human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes.