Reviews & Analysis

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  • This Review provides a comprehensive overview of currently available animal models of postpartum hemorrhage, comparing their anatomy and physiology and highlighting their advantages and limitations to support therapeutic development for this condition.

    • Sarah E. Hargett
    • Elaine F. Leslie
    • Akhilesh K. Gaharwar
    Review Article
  • No, we are not talking about a new dish for dinner, but a study representing an emerging research field. Psilocybin research is gaining momentum, and zebrafish behavioral neuroscience research has been exponentially expanding. At the intersection of these two research fields is a recent paper that utilized high-tech video-tracking to detect behavioral changes induced by this psychoactive drug in larval zebrafish.

    • Robert Gerlai
    News & Views
  • Biomedical research is experiencing a data explosion, but this does not guarantee building upon knowledge gained from previous experiments. Without appropriate metadata, data can be wasted, especially in animal research. A minimal metadata set is proposed to enable data repurposing, aligning with ARRIVE 2.0 guidelines and making in vivo data FAIR-compliant.

    • Anastasios Moresis
    • Leonardo Restivo
    • Alexandra Bannach-Brown
    PerspectiveOpen Access
  • Fernandez, Martinez-Romero et al. review concepts, methods, tools and challenges to leverage Big Data in preclinical aging research, with a focus on rodent studies.

    • Maria Emilia Fernandez
    • Jorge Martinez-Romero
    • Rafael de Cabo
    Review Article
  • Unlocking the secrets of the brain requires high precision tools to record neuronal activity. Neuroscientists have tools to capture neuronal activity with unprecedented speed, precision and fidelity. Thanks to a ground-breaking redesign of the linker peptide of GCaMP proteins, a domain seldomly considered for optimization, a new sensor bridges the gap between calcium imaging and electrophysiology.

    • Ana Marta Capaz
    • Nicolas Renier
    News & Views
  • A recent study performed directed C5-cytosine methylation of CpG islands to demonstrate that acquired methylation at critical loci could be reestablished for multiple generations in mice. This work provides a manipulatable system to examine how non-genetic information is transmitted across generations to regulate complex phenotypes.

    • Gautam Sarkar
    • Eric Lieberman Greer
    News & Views
  • New research using high-dimensional behavioural analyses has further undermined the “females are the more variable sex” trope that often accompanies all-male studies. But when we consider the benefits to the inclusion of females in research, their lesser variability is only the icing on the cake. It’s just good science, really.

    • Bronwyn M. Graham
    News & ViewsOpen Access
  • Despite centuries of effort from philosophers, physicians and biologists, the answer to the seemingly simple question “what is aging?” remains elusive. Some even posit that aging represents a phenomenon too expansive to ever be succinctly defined. A new study tackles this question by profiling hundreds of phenotypes across age in mice and examining how the trajectories of these phenotypes are altered by geroprotective genetic and dietary interventions.

    • Michael R. MacArthur
    • Sarah J. Mitchell
    News & Views
  • The application of genome-editing tools to generate point mutations in animal models is of particular value for precise disease modeling, but the PAM requirement of Cas enzymes is a critical limiting factor. Two new studies demonstrate that SpRY variant displays efficient genome editing in a nearly PAM-less manner in zebrafish, expanding the targeting scope of base editors in this model.

    • Pratishtha Varshney
    • Gaurav K. Varshney
    News & Views
  • Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the FKBP5 gene influence the risk of developing stress-related disorders, but the underlying processes are not fully understood. Animal models offer a possibility to investigate the influence of FKBP5 gene variants on the stress response system.

    • Marie-Pierre Moisan
    News & Views
  • In this Review, the authors provide recommendations for the implementation of the 3Rs in all the steps and procedures in the generation of genetically modified rodents; they also discuss future welfare challenges associated with advances in genome modification techniques.

    • Branko Zevnik
    • Boris Jerchow
    • Thorsten Buch
    Review Article
  • New insights into gut-brain axis and cognition function show that accumulation of Caudovirales bacteriophages in the gut microbiota is associated with improved executive function and memory.

    • Mercedes Gomez de Agüero
    • Aryan Rahimi-Midani
    News & Views
  • In this Review, the authors identify and compare available pig models in pain research. They also describe the different pain assessment methods used in pigs and compare them with the pain assessment methods used in humans to identify overlaps and possible improvements.

    • Suzan Meijs
    • Martin Schmelz
    • Winnie Jensen
    Review Article