Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I hear you all, yes, we read your comments. Yes, we know mice are not humans. Look, I'm

  • not the one doing the studies! Ask the scientists! OKAY I'll look! Why DO we use mice?!

  • A lot of the time, when we're reporting on science here at DNews, the studies we're reading

  • are done with mice. Mice have been used for more than 100 years in tons of scientific

  • research. Today, the laboratory mouse or Mus Musculus is used as a human analog in everything

  • from brain disease studies to social interaction studies, cancer, smoking, obesity, genetics

  • so many things.

  • Scientists use mice because they are small, easy to care for, have a high reproduction

  • rate, and their genome has been sequenced. According to the National Center for Biotechnology

  • Information, there are over 450 inbred strains of white lab mice which can be selected and

  • customized for specific studies. Mice have similar immune systems and metabolisms, have

  • been inbred to minimize genetic differences for different mice, and can be (or have been)

  • genetically mutated so their DNA more closely mimics humans. Overall, researchers generally

  • accept mice as good stand-ins for us. But, as medicine drills deeper into the genetic

  • code, they've discovered even though we look the same on the surface, mice are still very

  • different.

  • It’s already known that humans and mice share 70 percent of the same protein-coding

  • gene sequences, and about HALF of their DNA overall. But new study in a series of papers

  • in Nature, Science, and Genome Research found some key variances in the way mouse and human

  • genes are regulated. More specifically, they found that a mouse’s immune, metabolic and

  • stress response systems behaved differently than a human’s at the genetic level.

  • Scientists had been operating under the assumption that mouse genes and human genes would express

  • the same way, but even though the genes appear to accomplish the same tasks, they did those

  • tasks in a slightly different way. Like taking a different road to the same destination

  • and in science, that little detail matters… a lot.

  • Now, let's not all start laughing at science, or assume that all the studies ever done are

  • now invalid lies. That's simply not the case. Mice and humans are still similar enough to

  • go along with, but as medicine probes deeper and gets more person-to-person specific, the

  • gene expression of each person is going to affect how they're treated. And knowing the

  • key differences in how mice and human genes work is going to affect HOW they'll create

  • that treatment.

  • As the researchers say, "the mouse continues to be a very good model [for humans]." Now

  • they just need to fine tune their experimentation.

  • Because 95 percent of ALL medical experiments use these genetically modified lab mice, more

  • research is needed to see which studies will have to be re-done (if any) using this new

  • information. And, luckily for us, the researchers promise there will be more than a dozen studies

  • on the mus musculus in the coming years. This is going to be super interesting.

  • How do you feel about science using mice?

I hear you all, yes, we read your comments. Yes, we know mice are not humans. Look, I'm

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it