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| United States Patent Application |
20090038020
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
CARTER; Daniel C.
|
February 5, 2009
|
HUMAN ALBUMIN ANIMAL MODELS FOR DRUG EVALUATION, TOXICOLOGY AND
IMMUNOGENICITY STUDIES
Abstract
An animal model is provided which is genetically engineered to express
human serum albumin, and such animals may be advantageously used in
assessing drugs, vaccines or other therapeutic compounds that may be used
in humans. In addition, an animal model is provided which does not
manufacture its own albumin and which has been injected with human serum
albumin. Through the use of these animal models, drugs and other
chemicals can be more accurately assessed in physiological environments
that reflect the conditions to be expected in humans, and such models
will be useful in assessing new drugs and evaluating toxic substances for
potential dangers as carcinogens, mutagens, etc. Other applications
include evaluating immunological properties of various albumin-engineered
proteins which might be administered to humans as therapeutics or
vaccines, and research of disease states, such as genetic diseases, to
provide further insight in treating these diseases.
| Inventors: |
CARTER; Daniel C.; (Huntsville, AL)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
STITES & HARBISON PLLC
1199 NORTH FAIRFAX STREET, SUITE 900
ALEXANDRIA
VA
22314
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
180851 |
| Series Code:
|
12
|
| Filed:
|
July 28, 2008 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
800/3; 800/14 |
| Class at Publication: |
800/3; 800/14 |
| International Class: |
G01N 33/00 20060101 G01N033/00; A01K 67/00 20060101 A01K067/00 |
Claims
1. A transgenic rat whose genome comprises a nucleic acid encoding human
serum albumin that is expressed in the rat's bloodstream, wherein the
gene coding for the native rat serum albumin is replaced by the nucleic
acid coding for human serum albumin such that the rat does not express
its own natural serum albumin.
2. The transgenic rat according to claim 1 wherein the rat has been
mutated so that it does not express its own natural serum albumin.
3. The transgenic rat according to claim 1 wherein the rat is an NAR rat.
4. The transgenic rate according to claim 1 wherein said rat has had its
gene for serum albumin knocked out.
5. A method of testing the efficacy, carcinogenicity, immunogenicity or
toxicity of an agent designed to be administered internally to a human
selected from the group consisting of vaccines, drugs and other
therapeutic compounds comprising the steps of administering internally
said agent into the transgenic rat according to claim 1 and determining
the efficacy, carcinogenicity, immunogenicity or toxicity of said agent
in said transgenic rat.
6. The method according to claim 5 wherein the testing is to evaluate the
efficacy of a drug or other therapeutic compound.
7. The method according to claim 5 wherein the testing is to evaluate the
carcinogenicity or toxigenicity of a drug or other therapeutic compound.
8. The method according to claim 5 wherein the testing is to evaluate the
immunogenicity or other immunological properties of a vaccine.
9. A transgenic NAR rat whose genome comprises nucleic acid coding for
human serum albumin which is expressed in the animal's bloodstream,
wherein the rat does not express its own natural serum albumin.
10. A transgenic rat whose genome comprises a nucleic acid encoding human
serum albumin that is expressed in the rat's bloodstream.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001]This application is a continuation application of U.S. Ser. No.
11/232,989, filed Sep. 23, 2005, which was a divisional application of
U.S. Ser. No. 10/171,688, filed Jun. 17, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No.
6,949,691, issued Sep. 27, 2005, which claims the benefit of U.S.
Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/298,124, filed Jun. 15, 2001. All of
said applications are incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002]This invention relates in general to an animal model with serum
attributes which have similar or identical properties and pharmokinetics
with the human blood system in order to improve the assessment and
development of new therapeutics and vaccines and to provide more reliable
systems for identifying chemicals or drugs that may be carcinogenic or
toxigenic to humans, and more specifically relates to transgenic animals
and other animal models which contain and/or express human serum albumin
and which thus can be used in methods of drug evaluation, toxicology and
immunogenicity so as to provide a far more accurate picture of how drugs
and chemicals will react in humans than would be possible through the
conventional testing of animals that do not express human serum albumin.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0003]The serum albumins belong to a multigene family of proteins that
includes alpha-fetoprotein and human group-specific component, also known
as vitamin-D binding protein. The members of this multigene family are
typically comprised of relatively large multi-domain proteins, and the
serum albumins are the major soluble proteins of the circulatory system
and contribute to many vital physiological processes. Serum albumin
generally comprises about 50% of the total blood component by dry weight,
and as such is responsible for roughly 80% of the maintenance of colloid
osmotic blood pressure and is chiefly responsible for controlling the
physiological pH of blood.
[0004]The albumins and their related blood proteins also play an extremely
important role in the transport, distribution and metabolism of many
endogenous and exogenous ligands in the human body, including a variety
of chemically diverse molecules including fatty acids, amino acids,
steroids, calcium, metals such as copper and zinc, and various
pharmaceutical agents. The albumin family of molecules are generally
thought to facilitate transfer of many of these ligands across
organ-circulatory interfaces such as the liver, intestines, kidneys and
the brain, and studies have suggested the existence of an albumin cell
surface receptor. See, e.g., Schnitzer et al., P.N.A.S. 85:6773 (1988).
The albumins are thus involved in a wide range of circulatory and
metabolic functions.
[0005]Human serum albumin (HSA) is a protein of about 66,500 kD and is
comprised of 585 amino acids including at least 17 disulphide bridges. As
with many of the members of the albumin family, human serum albumin plays
an extremely important role in human physiology and is located in
virtually every human tissue and bodily secretion. Human serum albumin is
the major protein of the circulatory system and as such is involved in
the attachment, distribution and metabolism of all known pharmaceuticals
because of its particular binding affinities to these chemicals. The
atomic structure and particular details regarding the binding affinities
of albumin and the specific regions primarily responsible for those
binding properties have been previously determined as set forth, e.g., in
U.S. Ser. No. 08/448,196, filed May 25, 1993, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,780,594
and U.S. Ser. No. 08/984,176, filed Dec. 3, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No.
5,948,609, both of which are incorporated herein by reference. Other
articles or references of relevance with regard to human serum albumin
include Carter et al., Advances in Protein Chemistry, 45:153-203 (1994);
Peters, Jr., "All About Albumin", Academic Press (1995); Camerman et al.,
Can J. Chem., 54:1309-1316 (1976); Lau et al., J. Biol. Chem.,
249:5878-5884 (1974); Callan et al., Res. Commun. Chem. Pathol.
Pharmacol., 5:459-472 (1973); and Nieboer et al., Br. J. Ind. Med.,
41:56-63 (1984); and all of these references are incorporated by
reference as well.
[0006]It is also widely known and understood that the amino acid sequences
in the different animals vary from humans in differing degrees, from
essentially 98% homology for chimpanzees to a more typical value of
approximately 60% for other animals such as dogs, mice, rats, etc. While
data has shown the overall conservation of the three-dimensional
structure of albumin from other species, the specific residues involved
in the ligand binding chemistry are distinctly different and account for
sometimes quite different pharmokinetics and toxicity involving drug
experiments with animal models. As a result, the literature is replete
with examples of drugs which appeared to be extremely effective in animal
testing only to show extremely disappointing results when used in human
trials.
[0007]There is thus a significant need to develop new animal models which
can more accurately be utilized in toxicological and pharmokinetic
studies so as to more accurately reflect how a particular drug or other
chemical will work in humans.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008]Accordingly, it is thus an object of the present invention to create
animal models which supplement or replace the natural albumin sequence
with a typical human serum albumin sequence and which thus will be far
more effective in providing an accurate assessment of how drugs or other
chemicals will react in humans.
[0009]It is another object of the present invention to create transgenic
animals which contain and/or express human serum albumin and which will
thus be far more useful in methods of drug evaluation, toxicology and
immunogenicity and provide a far more accurate picture of how drugs,
chemicals and vaccines will react in humans than would be possible
through conventional testing of animals that do not express human
albumin.
[0010]It is still further an object of the present invention to create a
variety of transgenic animals from a variety of species which will
contain and express human serum albumin and which will thus be far more
useful in assessing the safety and efficacy of new drugs, vaccines, or
other medicaments.
[0011]It is yet another object of the present invention to provide even
further animal models for assessing the safety and efficacy of materials
such as drugs or vaccines which are intended to be administered
internally to humans, said models which are either natural mutants which
do not express their own serum albumin or mammals which have had the gene
for serum albumin knocked out, and such models can be injected with human
serum albumin which is retained in these mammals and thus provides an
animal model for assessing drugs or vaccines in humans more accurately
than in animal models which do not contain or express human serum
albumin.
[0012]It is still further an object to provide hybrid non-human mammals
which are transfected with the gene for human serum albumin yet maintain
their own expression of serum albumin, and thus such hybrid animals may
be used in methods of testing or assessing internal medicines, or in
research involving administration of such medicines in cases with a given
percentage of human serum albumin versus a given percentage of a serum
albumin from a non-human mammal.
[0013]It is even further an object of the present invention to provide a
method for assessing human drugs or vaccines, or other chemicals which
may be utilized in compositions taken by or applied to humans, by which
the drug, vaccine or chemical can be assessed in a manner more likely to
be consistent with the way that these materials will be handled by the
human body.
[0014]It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide
animal models which reflect the various genetic diseases and disease
states and which also incorporate and express a gene for human serum
albumin so as to be useful in methods of assessing drugs utilized to
treat or prevent genetic diseases or disease conditions caused by other
pathogens.
[0015]These and other objects are achieved by virtue of the present
invention which provides animal models wherein the animal contains human
serum albumin in its bloodstream, either through genetic engineering to
transfect a gene coding for human serum albumin, either in conjunction
with or as an alternate to the animal's own genes for producing albumin,
or through the use of animals which do not produce their own native
albumin and which have been injected with human serum albumin which is
retained in their bloodstream. The invention also provides methods of
preparing such animals and of using such animals in the assessment of
drugs, vaccines, chemicals or any other materials that may be used on
humans. Having distributions of the drugs in the circulatory system which
directly reflect the conditions to be expected in humans is of tremendous
value to the pharmaceutical industry and also has great application in
the evaluation of various toxic substances for potential dangers as
carcinogens, mutagens, etc. In addition, there are numerous applications
involving the evaluations of immunogenicity or other immunological
properties of various albumin-engineered proteins which might be
administered to humans as therapeutics or vaccines, and these will also
now be able to be assessed in animal models for closely following the
human blood system.
[0016]The animal models of the present invention, including transgenic
animals expressing human serum albumin as well as other models such as
mutant rats which do not produce their own albumin and which can be
injected with human serum albumin, can thus be used advantageously so as
to assess drugs or other internal medicines for their effect in the human
bloodstream and/or their reactions to a more normal human setting, namely
a bloodstream having human serum albumin therein. In addition, it is also
possible to employ the transgenic animals in accordance with the present
invention for the large-scale production of human serum albumin when such
production is desired.
[0017]These and other features of the present invention as set forth in,
or will become obvious from, the detailed description of the preferred
embodiments provided hereinbelow.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
[0018]FIG. 1 is a chromatograph showing the results of human serum albumin
testing involving animal model ODNAR10 in accordance with the invention,
including lane 1, the molecular weight marker, lane 2, a Sprague-Dawley
(SD) control rat, lane 3, blank, lane 4, NAR control rat, lane 5, serum
from female NAR rat 22, lane 6, serum from female NAR rat 23, lane 7,
serum from fee NAR rat 24, lane 8, serum from male NAR rat 30, lane 9,
blank, and lane 10, blood sample from ODNAR10 after fifth bleed.
[0019]FIG. 2 is a chromatograph showing the results of human serum albumin
testing involving animal model ODNAR14 in accordance with the invention,
including lane 1, the molecular weight marker (New England Biolabs,
Prestained Protein Marker, Broad Range #P7708S, premixed, Lot 25), lane
2, SD control rat, lane 3, blank, lane 4, pre-HSA injection bleed of
ODNAR14, lane 5, blank, lane 6, ODNAR14 after 4.sup.th post-injection
bleed, lane 7, ODNAR14 after 3.sup.rd post-injection bleed, lane 8,
ODNAR14 after 2.sup.nd post-injection bleed, lane 9, ODNAR14 after
1.sup.st post-injection bleed, lane 10, blank.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0020]In accordance with the present invention, animal models are provided
which contain and/or express human serum albumin either in conjunction
with, or as an alternative to, the animal's own genes for producing
albumin. The amino acid and nucleic acid sequences for human serum
albumin are known and have been disclosed, e.g., in U.S. Pat. No.
5,780,594 (Carter et al.) and in the journal articles Hawkins et al.,
Gene 19 (1):55-8 (1982) and Lawn et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 9
(22):6103-114 (1981), all herein incorporated by reference. In one
preferred mode of the invention, the transgenic animal models of the
present invention are constructed via genetic engineering of an
appropriate animal so that genes coding for human serum albumin are
incorporated into the genome of the animal which is then able to express
human serum albumin. In one embodiment, this genetically engineered
animal may be constructed through the introduction of genes coding for
human serum albumin without knocking out the animal's own genes for
albumin. In these "hybrid" animal models, the animals will thus have a
range of percentages of human serum albumin and of its own natural
albumin in its plasma, e.g., 50% human serum albumin and 50% animal serum
albumin, depending on the nature and extent of the introduced human serum
albumin genes. These hybrid mice are particularly suited for
immunological studies since they will express both types of albumin and
may not undergo an immunological reaction to either form of albumin.
[0021]However, in another embodiment of the invention, an animal model for
drug testing and testing of other materials in environments that will
more closely approach human conditions is prepared by introducing a gene
for human serum albumin while eliminating the animal's own genes for
producing albumin. This type of animal model, resulting in a "knock-out"
and "knock-in" mouse, will most closely approach the physiology of the
human circulatory system because the animal model in this case will have
all of its blood plasma dominated by human serum albumin and will not
produce the animal's own natural albumin. As described further below, in
the preferred animal model of the invention, it is highly desirable to
perform a "knock in" process simultaneously with the procedure wherein
the gene coding for the animal's native albumin is knocked out and the
gene for human serum albumin is "knocked in" at the same location as the
animal's own gene for serum albumin. This is particularly desirable
because the inserted gene for human serum albumin will be at the most
appropriate location in the genome to interact with the other sequences
involved in the operation and expression of the albumin gene, and it is
thus more likely that the functioning of the animal and the expression of
the albumin will be carried out more normally if the human gene for
albumin is inserted at the animal's normal location for the albumin gene.
[0022]In accordance with the present invention, any animal that is
currently used for lab testing of materials such as drugs, vaccines or
other chemical substances, may be used as the animal model for the
present invention. In the typical case, the animals used will be
non-human mammals, including small mammals such as rabbits, mice, rats,
guinea pigs and other rodents. However, larger mammals, such as dogs, are
also used in lab testing and can be made transgenic so as to express
human serum albumin. In addition, other mammals that have commonly been
subject to transgenic processes, such as pigs, sheep, calves and cows,
may also be made into transgenic animal models in accordance with the
invention if so desired for particular testing.
[0023]In this regard, it is contemplated that in addition to being useful
as animal models in accordance with the invention, transgenic animals
which are constructed in accordance with the invention may be usable in
the large scale production of human serum albumin. In this aspect of the
invention, it is generally contemplated that those animals which may
normally be used for large-scale production of a transgenic products,
particularly cows, pigs, sheep or goats, may be utilized which will
express human serum albumin in their bloodstream which can then be
isolated and purified for use in human applications. In such a case, it
would be preferred if the transgenic animal of the invention is one
wherein the genetic material coding for the animal's own native albumin
is knocked out so that the animal only produces one kind of serum
albumin, namely human, which will assist in the isolation and
purification of the albumin obtained from transgenic animals expressing
human serum albumin in their bloodstream.
[0024]As would be recognized by one of ordinary skill in this art,
transgenic animals which contain and express human serum albumin can be
manufactured in a number of suitable ways which are now well known in the
art. For example, the methods of making transgenic mammals such as
disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,736,866 (Leder et al.) and 4,873,191
(Wagner), both incorporated herein by reference, may be utilized in order
to produce the transgenic animal models of the present invention. In
addition, numerous other methods of genetically engineering animals so as
to insert a particular gene or to express an inserted gene are well known
in the art and may be used to produce the transgenic animal models of the
present invention.
[0025]In the preferred process of the present invention, the nucleic acids
coding for human serum albumin may be added to the genome of a host
animal by means of P-element derived vectors as disclosed in U.S. Pat.
No. 6,291,243, incorporated herein by reference. In this process, the
introduction of exogenous genetic material coding for human serum albumin
is achieved through the insertion of P element-derived vectors, which
include a pair of P element transposase recognized insertion sequences.
In the preferred process, the desired albumin gene may be transferred
into the host mammal, e.g., through microinjection into mouse
oocyte/embryo nuclei to create a germ line transfer of genetic material.
[0026]As indicated above, an animal model in accordance with the preferred
embodiment of the invention will have the gene coding for human serum
albumin inserted into its genome, and this gene will include all
necessary regions, including operons, promoters, etc., to ensure that the
gene for human serum albumin will be expressed in the animal model. In
the particularly preferred embodiment, the transgenic animal model
containing and expressing human serum albumin will be an animal which
does not express its own serum albumin, and such an animal may be
obtained as a natural mutant such as an NAR rat which does not express
its own albumin. Alternatively, the animal model may have its own gene
for albumin "knocked out" by any of the currently available genetic
knock-out techniques well known to those skilled in the art, e.g., those
techniques disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,767,337 and
6,194,633, and in Westphal, C. H. and Leder, P. "Transposon-Generated
`Knock-Out` and `Knock-In` Gene-Targeting Constructs for Use in Mice"
Current Biology 7:R530-R533 (1997), all of these references incorporated
herein by reference. As indicated above, in cases where the "knock out"
of the animal's own gene for albumin is to be performed in conjunction
with the transfection of the animal so as to insert the human gene for
albumin, this is preferably done by performing the "knock in" operation
at the same time so that the human albumin gene will replace the animal's
albumin gene at its proper location in the genome. As another
possibility, as also indicated above, it is possible to insert a human
serum albumin gene into the genome of the animal model without knocking
out the animal's own genetic instructions for producing albumin, and this
will result in the production of "hybrid" mice that produce human serum
albumin in addition to their own native albumin.
[0027]In another embodiment of the present invention, an animal model
capable of more accurately reflecting the likely reaction in the
bloodstream of potential therapeutic compounds is provided which
comprises a non-human mammal which is incapable, either via a natural
mutation or via a procedure to knock out the serum albumin gene, of
producing its own serum albumin. In such animal models, it is intended
that human serum albumin may be injected into said albumin-deficient
mammal, and the resulting animal retains the injected human serum albumin
and thus may be used as an animal model to assess drugs or other
therapeutic compounds that may be ingested by or administered to humans.
In this embodiment, an appropriate animal is selected which either has
been bred not to express serum albumin, or is a natural mutant animal,
such as an NAR rat, which does not express its own serum albumin. Still
further, it is possible to utilize an animal in which the gene for serum
albumin is knocked out via conventional genetic techniques. In any of
these cases, the animal is selected which does not contain or express its
own albumin, and the animal model in accordance with the invention is
constructed by then injecting a suitable amount of human serum albumin in
the bloodstream which is retained in the animal's bloodstream for
suitable periods to allow the animal to be used as an animal model.
[0028]In accordance with the present invention, it is also contemplated
that animal models will be constructed which will which reflect the
various genetic diseases and disease states and which also incorporate
and express a gene for human serum albumin. For example, an animal model
in accordance with the invention may also be constructed with any of a
variety of genetic diseases, e.g., hemophilia, sickle cell anemia, etc.,
or may be used to assess pathogenic diseases, and will also express or
contain human serum albumin in its bloodstream. These animal models in
accordance with the invention will thus be particularly useful in methods
of assessing drugs utilized to treat or prevent such genetic diseases or
disease conditions caused by other pathogens.
[0029]In general, the animal models of the present invention will thus be
useful for testing of the efficacy or toxicology of drugs or other
chemicals, such as product additives, in any of the numerous conventional
methods presently used by those skilled in the art for such testing using
animal models. These tests commonly involve the administration of a
suitable amount of a drug or other chemical agent to be assessed into an
animal model such as a mouse, rat, guinea pig or other appropriate
non-human mammal followed by the close examination of the animal model to
determine the efficacy or toxicity of the administered or injected agent.
The animal models of the present invention as described above may be
utilized in place of the models currently used and will thus be more
accurate in determining the true efficacy or toxicity of such drugs or
other chemical, physical or biological agent in humans because the
administered compound or substance will be introduced into an environment
which far more closely mimics that which will be faced in humans.
[0030]In one particular application of the animal models of the present
invention, the models may be used to test the safety and efficacy of
albumin mutations or substitutes which may be administered to human or
animal patients to improve oxygen transport capability or which may be
used when needed, such as during a blood transfusion in locations wherein
natural blood is scarce or unavailable. For example, the animal models of
the invention may be utilized to test blood substitutes such as the
oxygen-transporting albumin as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,948,609,
incorporated herein by reference. In addition, the models of the
invention may be useful in testing other modified forms of albumin such
as the modified serum albumins disclosed in PCT Publication WO 02/05645,
also incorporated herein by reference.
[0031]In another embodiment of the present invention, the animal models of
the invention will be useful in testing the immunogenicity or other
immunological properties of vaccines or other materials using
conventional methods in this field which currently use animal models as a
means of assessing efficacy or reactions to new vaccines. In particular,
the use of the animal models of the present invention will be far more
suitable in assessing the immunogenic reaction in an environment such as
the human bloodstream because the animal model of the invention will
contain and/or express human serum albumin. In one particular application
of the invention, the models will be of particular use in cases wherein
molecules or compounds are coupled with albumin in fusion proteins
wherein the albumin assists in extending the capacity of the compound to
stay in the bloodstream without dissolving. Alternatively, fusion
proteins wherein a drug or other compound is fused with human albumin are
produced in which the albumin provides a particular timed-release of the
active ingredient. In any event, the animal models of the present
invention which express human serum albumin are suitable models to test
such albumin-containing fusion proteins because they are less likely to
treat the albumin of the fusion protein as a foreign object. Accordingly,
use of the albumin models to assess the immunogenicity or other
properties or reactions of these fusion proteins will be far more
reflective of how those fusion proteins will react in the human
bloodstream. In these applications which are suitable for the models of
the present invention, it is again contemplated that the use of the
animal models of the invention will be the same as that which is
undergone for animal models which do not express human serum albumin, and
that the present invention will thus be suitable for use in any
conventional immunological or other testing currently used in the field
which employs conventional animal models.
[0032]In summary, the animal models of the present invention can be
utilized for any of the purposes conventional animal models are used
presently, and such animals in accordance with the present invention will
afford a more accurate picture of the way that drugs or other physical,
chemical or biological agents will react in the human body.
[0033]It is thus submitted that the foregoing embodiments are only
illustrative of the claimed invention and not limiting of the invention
in any way, and alternative embodiments that would be obvious to one
skilled in the art not specifically set forth above also fall within the
scope of the claims.
[0034]The following examples are presently only as illustrative of certain
aspects of the present invention and do not act to limit the scope of the
invention in any way.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
Injection of Albumin into NAR Rats
[0035]In accordance with the present invention, a natural mutant rat which
does not express or contain its own serum albumin, namely an NAR rat
identified as ODNAR10, was utilized as an animal model in accordance with
the present invention by injecting the animal with suitable amounts of
human serum albumin. In this example, the NAR was given intravenous
albumin injection/infusions by initially injecting relatively small
amounts of HSA solution into the animal (1 mL). The amount of blood
administered to this initial NAR rat was monitored over a 25 day period
and this monitoring showed that a significant amount of human albumin had
accumulated in the rat's system during this time, as shown by the
chromatograph of FIG. 1, wherein column 10 represents the blood sample
obtained from ODNAR10. By the end of the treatment (when the animal
expired during anesthesia), ODNAR10 had received a total of 2.125 g HSA
administered over a 25 day period (Table I).
[0036]Following the administration of albumin to ODNAR10, injections of
HSA were given to a second NAR rat identified as ODNAR14, this time a
female who had proven barren in the breeding program. It was estimated
that if the animal's total blood volume was 25 mL and the "normal"
concentration of albumin in a mammal is about 40 mg/mL, then she would
have about 1 g of albumin in her blood. On the assumption that the
albumin in plasma represents approximately half of the total body
albumin, this rat would have about 2 g of albumin in her total body
compartments. To allow for losses through natural turnover during the
time over which albumin would be administered (half-life of albumin=17
d), as well as some degradation by the immune and other systems, we aimed
to administer 3 g over about a 10 day period (Table II). Albumin was
administered at a rate of 2.5 ml (625 mg) every few days (see Table II)
and blood was drawn immediately prior to each injection of albumin for
SDS-PAGE analysis.
[0037]FIG. 2 shows the results of this experiment. As can be seen, albumin
is present in the serum of this rat at the first time-point of blood
collection after initiation of albumin injections (FIG. 2, lane 9) and
appears to accumulate throughout the duration of the experiment (compare
lanes 9 through 6 which represent blood drawn after sequential albumin
injections, with lane 9 showing the results after the first bleed, lane 8
showing the results after the second bleed and so on until the 4.sup.th
bleed shown in lane 6). A rough concentration estimate comparing the
amount of albumin in the plasma of ODNAR14 at the 4.sup.th post HSA
injections bleed (FIG. 2, lane 6) with the normal amount in the plasma of
a Sprague-Dawley control rat (FIG. 2, lane 2), indicates that our
procedure has introduced approximately 25-40% of normal albumin levels
into ODNAR14's plasma. Still further albumin may be injected wherein it
is desired to increase the level of human albumin further in accordance
with the invention, and accordingly it is contemplated that additional
procedures, such as a continual infusion of albumin over a longer time or
more frequent administration or injections of yet larger volumes, may
result in still higher plasma albumin levels. Thus, the animals with
injected human serum albumin in accordance with the present invention may
suitably be used to test or otherwise assess drugs or other compounds,
such as camptothecin compounds, and will thus be useful in replacing
conventional animal models currently used in such testing.
TABLE-US-00001
TABLE I
Dates and Amounts of HSA Injected into Pioneer NAR rat (ODNAR10)
To Investigate the Distribution of HSA into Plasma
AMOUNT HSA(b)
DATE(a) BLOOD DRAWN ADMINISTERED(c)
27 Feb. 2002 Pre albumin administration None
30 Apr. 2002 No 1 mL (250 mg)
02 May 2002 Yes 1 mL (250 mg)
06 May 2002 Yes 1 mL (250 mg)
10 May 2002 Yes 1 mL (250 mg)
22 May 2002 Yes 2 mL (500 mg)
25 May 2002 Yes 2.5 mL (625 mg)
28 May 2002 Died in anesthesia
(a)Total period over which albumin was administered was 25 days.
(b)Plasbumin-25; Bayer Albumin (Human) 25% (250 mg/mL), Lot number
684W027, Manufacturing date = 11 Apr. 2000, Expiry date = 11 Apr. 2003,
Code = 684-71.
(c)Total amount of albumin administered prior to death of animal was 2.125
g.
TABLE-US-00002
TABLE II
Dates and Amounts of HSA Injected into Second NAR rat (ODNAR14)
To Investigate the Distribution of HSA into Plasma
AMOUNT HSA(b)
DATE(a) BLOOD DRAWN ADMINISTERED(c)
28 May 2002 Pre albumin administration 2.5 mL (625 mg)
30 May 2002 Yes 2.5 mL (625 mg)
03 Jun. 2002 Yes 2.5 mL (625 mg)
05 Jun. 2002 Yes 2.5 mL (625 mg)
07 Jun. 2002 Yes 2.5 mL (626 mg)
(a)Total period over which albumin was administered was 10 days.
(b)Plasbumin-25; Bayer Albumin (Human) 25% (250 mg/mL), Lot number
684W027, Manufacturing date = 11 Apr. 2000, Expiry date = 11 Apr. 2003,
Code = 684-71.
(c)Total amount of albumin administered to animal was 3.125 g.
Example 2
Transgenic NAR Rats
[0038]In accordance with the present invention, transgenic animal models
were prepared which were transfected with the gene for human serum
albumin. In this example, first generation NAR rat pups were sent to TOSK
for injection of the HSA gene within their proprietary STEALTHGENE
vector. Pups were sent to TOSK between the weights of 80 and 120 g, as
per their instructions, due to their procedure being most amenable to
this age and weight of rat. From the breeding program we have instigated
for NAR rats, we have learned that females need to be on the order of 230
g before they conceive reliably. As of today, our heaviest females
returned from TOSK have been transfected with the gene for human serum
albumin and are 185.5 g and 190 g and growing at a rate of about 15 g
every 3 to 4 days. In accordance with the invention, these animals are
thus suitable as models for animal testing, and because they have been
genetically transformed, such animals will be useful in that when bred,
they will pass on the gene coding for human serum albumin to their
offspring.
[0039]In the preferred breeding program in accordance with the invention,
the usual procedures for producing and breeding a transgenic animal will
be followed. In this procedure, first the founders will be bred to
non-injected animals to produce heterozygote animals--the F1 generation.
Each of these potential heterozygotes will be bred again to non-injected
animals to produce the F2 generation of heterozygotes. Whereas the F1
heterozygotes will all be different from one another, each heterozygote
individual from within a single litter of the F2 generation will be
identical to its littermates with respect to the position and integration
number of the HSA gene into its genome. Heterozygous siblings from the F2
generation will be bred together (brother.times.sister) to produce truly
homozygous animals in the F3 generation. Other breeding strategies could
be run in parallel. For example, a compound homozygote could be produced
by mating two founders together that potentially produced more albumin in
its plasma than may eventuate from the "classical" breeding strategy. PCR
analysis can be performed on F1 and F2 individuals to establish the
presence of the HSA gene. Southern blot analysis will be used also and
especially to confirm homozygosity in the F3 generation. In addition,
conventional gel experiments can be performed to confirm the production
of human serum albumin in the transgenic animals in accordance with the
invention.
* * * * *