Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2017)

The chinchilla as a novel animal model of pregnancy

  • Emmeli Mikkelsen,
  • Henrik Lauridsen,
  • Per Mose Nielsen,
  • Haiyun Qi,
  • Thomas Nørlinger,
  • Maria Dahl Andersen,
  • Niels Uldbjerg,
  • Christoffer Laustsen,
  • Puk Sandager,
  • Michael Pedersen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.161098
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4

Abstract

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Several parameters are important when choosing the most appropriate animal to model human obstetrics, including gestation period, number of fetuses per gestation and placental structure. The domesticated long-tailed chinchilla (Chinchilla lanigera) is a well-suited and appropriate animal model of pregnancy that often will carry only one offspring and has a long gestation period of 105–115 days. Furthermore, the chinchilla placenta is of the haemomonochorial labyrinthine type and is therefore comparable to the human villous haemomonochorial placenta. This proof-of-concept study demonstrated the feasibility in laboratory settings, and demonstrated the potential of the pregnant chinchilla as an animal model for obstetric research and its potential usefulness for non-invasive measurements in the placenta. We demonstrate measurements of the placental and fetal metabolism (demonstrated in vivo by hyperpolarized MRI and in vitro by qPCR analyses), placental vessels (demonstrated ex vivo by contrast-enhanced CT angiography) and overall anatomy (demonstrated in vivo by whole-body CT).

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