Using a more diverse microbiome, scientists look to create a better lab mouse
A new mouse model with a diverse microbiome may help scientists in their quest to make meaningful discoveries in mice that will translate well in humans.
by Shraddha Chakradhar
Aug 01, 2019
4 minutes
Lab mice are notoriously clean: To prevent introducing anything that could disrupt results, researchers house them in sterile conditions, and the food and water they ingest are monitored for extreme quality.
This also means that the mice’s microbiomes — the cohort of microorganisms that reside within all animals and influence many body processes — have been controlled for. While that environment can be conducive to studying a host of conditions, the findings may not really be relevant for people who don’t live under such regimented conditions.
That’s the argument from researchers behind a new published Thursday in Science. They describe a new mouse model they created that is genetically a lab
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