Division of Gastroenterology & Liver Diseases

Special Animals Core

Core Director: Sanjeev Gupta, M.D. 

Purpose 

Animal models of human disease constitute an indispensable modality for investigators. The missions of the Special Animals Core are as follows:

  1. Breed, maintain and provide specific animals that are not at all available or are not readily available elsewhere
  2. Instruct investigators or designees in specific animal procedures
  3. Provide consultation in general experimental design for animal studies or for working with animals requiring special attention due to disease or other perturbations
  4. Develop or reproduce animal models for relevant studies
  5. Maintain the Core as a dynamic force with additions and deletions in its stock according to Liver Research Center requirements
  6. Incorporate new services according to the needs of center investigators
  7. Encourage use of the Core by new investigators

Services 

  1. Bred Animals

    • Gunn rat (congeneic with the Wistar-RHA strain)
    • Wistar-RHA rat
    • Long Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat with copper toxicosis
    • Long Evans rat syngeneic to LEC rats (LEA)
    • Dipeptidyl peptidase IV mutant (DPPIV) F344 rat
    • Dipeptidyl peptidase IV knockout in C57BL/6 background
    • NOD-CB17-prkdc-SCID-IL2Rg null mice
    • C57BL/6-Tg(ACTB-RGFP)1Osb/J GFP mice
     
  2. Other Services

    1. Reproduction of Animal Models for Investigators

      • Acute liver injury in rats by treatment with D-galactosamine, CCl4, allyl alcohol, thiocetamide, acetaminophen, monocrotaline, etc.
      • Acute liver injury in mice with azoxymethane, CCl4, concavalin A, monocrotaline, etc.
      • Induction of cirrhosis in rats by chronic administration of CCl4.
      • Radiation-induced liver disease in the rat.
      • Localized and metastatic liver tumors in immunodeficient mice.
       
    2. Training and/or Assistance with Animal Procedures

      • Partial hepatectomy (68%, 35%) in rats, mice, rabbits and woodchucks.
      • Injections into the peritoneal cavity, portal vein, superior mesenteric vein, spleen, internal jugular vein, femoral vein or tail vein in mouse and rats, and intraorbital injections in mice.
      • Gallbladder or bile duct cannulation and bile collection in rats and mice.
      • Liver perfusion in mice, rats, rabbits, woodchucks and ducks.
      • Intrathymic injections in mice and rats.
      • Intrasplenic, intraportal, subcutaneous cell transplantation.
      • Portal and right atrial pressure measurements.
      • Implantation of osmotic pumps for intraperitoneal, intrasplenic or intravenous infusions.
      • Nuclear medicine methods for quantitating intrahepatic shunting, blood pool analysis with radiolabeled RBC, hepatobiliary excretion of radiolabeled ligands, and biodistribution of radiolabeled liver cells.
      • Analysis of Kupffer cell function with incorporation of carbon particles or radiolabeled technetium sulfur-colloid.
      • Perfusion fixation of liver and other tissues in situ for tissue analysis or electron microscopy.
       
    3. Animal rederivation, breeding or backcrossing

    4. Embryo harvest and freezing

     

Contact Us

Albert Einstein College of Medicine
625 Ullman Building
1300 Morris Park Avenue
Bronx, NY 10461

Phone: 718.430.2098

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