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    What's this?
Sandy wipes out NYU lab mice, a huge setback for medical research
If researchers sent some mice genes to other universities, they can get copies. If not, they start from scratch.

By

Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience
Thu, Nov 01 2012 at 9:31 AM

Related Topics:

Natural Disasters, Research & Innovation, Hurricane, Science
White lab mouse

Photo: iliuta goean/Shutterstock

New York University Hospital has reportedly lost thousands of laboratory mice to Hurricane Sandy, a research setback that could take years to correct, according to scientists.
 
The New York Daily News, citing an unnamed source, reported that thousands of mice perished when the storm flooded the hospital's Smilow building. Power failure in the building also took out freezers and refrigerators, likely destroying other biological research materials, the source reported.
 
NYU phone systems remained down on Oct. 31 with nonessential staff ordered to stay home, and LiveScience was unable to confirm the number of mouse deaths. However, if the reports are true, outside scientists say the consequences for medical research could be far-reaching.
 
"It's really, really devastating," said Jacco van Rheenen, a medical physicist at the Hubrecht Institute in the Netherlands who has worked with laboratory mice. The problem may go beyond NYU, van Rheenan told LiveScience.
 
"Some mice are unique, they're just made for certain research," he said. "So if [the researchers] didn't send it out to other labs, that line is just lost." [On the Ground: Hurricane Sandy in Images]
 
Making a lab mouse
Mice can breed several times a year, and they reach maturity quickly. But that doesn't mean that it's easy to keep a colony of lab mice going. Scientists use genetic engineering techniques to create and breed what are called transgenic mice — strains where certain genes are "knocked out" or otherwise altered so researchers can pinpoint genetic variables in development and disease.
 
Creating these transgenic lines can take years. It starts with lab work to target a specific gene, said Ashley Seifert, who researches tissue regeneration at the University of Florida in Gainesville. Next, researches have to insert the altered genes into mice blastocysts (early embryos) and then implant those embryos into mother mice that can gestate the new strain. Then the researchers have to make sure the genetic alterations made it through development and into the sperm and egg of the baby mice so that they can breed and pass on these changes.
 
Simply knocking out one gene so that it doesn't function in the body takes about a year, Seifert told LiveScience. Many transgenic mice are more complex than that, however, and additional genetic alterations require crossbreeding or manipulating multiple genes. That can take two or three years.
 
How to rebuild
It's the kind of time a doctoral student might not have, Seifert said. A Ph.D. student working for three years to create a transgenic mouse strain for her research could find herself back to square one in what's supposed to be a five- or six-year program.
 
"If I were to lose all my mice in one fell swoop, I'm basically starting from scratch and have lost three years of work," Seifert said. It's the equivalent of the only copy of a typewritten novel burning in a house fire, he added. [Gallery: The Art of Biomedical Research]
 
Not to mention three years of funding. Research money is hard to come by, and grants are competitive, said Erich Jarvis, a neurobiologist at Duke University. And in an academic climate of "publish or perish," early-career researchers who suffer a setback can be in trouble.
 
"Graduate students and postdocs, their careers depend on publishing successful scientific research, and if they lose their animals that's going to set them back," Jarvis told LiveScience. "I'm making it sound dire here, but it probably is."
 
Once the power is on and the damage cataloged, NYU researchers will have to rebuild, scientists said. If researchers have shared their mouse strains with other scientists, they'll be able to call their colleagues and ask for replacements, Jarvis said — a type of scientific sharing that may save some researchers in the wake of this disaster.
 
"If somebody sent me something from NYU and they called me up, I would say, 'I'll breed you more animals,'" Jarvis said.
 
But some strains may be unique to NYU, either because their creators chose not to share them or because they're too new. Those researchers will have no choice but to scrape that line of work or start all over again. Graduate students will likely require extensions of deadlines to complete their work.
 
"One thing I would not do is, I wouldn't give up," Jarvis said.
 
Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience:
  • Hurricane Sandy: Photos of a Frankenstorm
  • The 10 Weirdest Animal Discoveries
  • Hurricane Isaac Aftermath: Swamp Rats Die en Masse
 
Related Hurricane Sandy story on MNN: Superstorm Sandy: A climate wake-up call
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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