Claims
- 1. A transgenic mouse whose somatic and germ cells have a substantial deficiency in the corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1, wherein both alleles of the corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 are disrupted resulting in a mouse with decreased anxiety, reduced endocrine response to stress and increased locomoter activity rhythms as compared to a control mouse.
- 2. A method of identifying an agonist of corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family that acts through receptors other than corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1, comprising the steps of:
- a) administering a test compound or a placebo compound to a transgenic mouse of claim 1;
- b) administering a corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family to a wild type mouse;
- c) determining the level of anxiety, the endocrine response to stress, and the locomoter activity rhythms in both the transgenic and the wild type mice; and
- d) comparing the level of anxiety, the endocrine response to stress, and the locomoter activity rhythms in, wherein effects caused by said test compound, and not by said placebo, that mimic the effects caused by a corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family are indicative of an agonist of a corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family acting through a receptor other than corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1.
- 3. The method of claim 2 wherein said receptor other than corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 is selected from the group consisting of corticotropin releasing factor receptor-2 and a receptor in the corticotropin releasing factor receptor family.
- 4. A method of identifying an antagonist of corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family that acts through a receptor other than corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1, comprising the steps of:
- a) administering a test compound or a placebo compound to a transgenic mouse of claim 1;
- b) administering a corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family to a transgenic mouse of claim 1,
- c) determining the effects of the test compound, the placebo, and the corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family, on the level of anxiety, the endocrine response to stress, and the locomoter activity rhythms in each mouse; and
- d) comparing the levels of anxiety, the endocrine responses to stress, and the locomoter activity rhythms in each mouse, wherein a test compound is deemed to be an antagonist if it causes effects not caused by the placebo, wherein said effects are opposite to those caused by corticotropin releasing factor, urocortin, or a ligand in the corticotropin releasing factor family.
- 5. The method of claim 4, wherein said receptor other than corticotropin releasing factor-1 is selected from the group consisting of corticotropin releasing factor receptor-2 and a receptor in the corticotropin releasing factor receptor family.
- 6. A method of screening compounds that are analogs or agonists of corticosterone or corticotropin, comprising the steps of:
- a) performing a mating between a homozygous female mouse of claim 1 and a homozygous male mouse of claim 1;
- b) administering a pharmaceutically acceptable dose of said compound to said female mouse post-conception; and
- c) determining the histological condition of the lungs of progeny born to said female mouse, wherein an absence of displaysia, alveolar collapse and reactive emphysema with intraalveolar hemorrhage and hemosiderotic deposition is indicative of an analog or agonist of corticosterone or corticotropin.
- 7. The progeny of a mating between a mouse of claim 1 and a mouse of another strain, wherein both alleles of the corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 are disrupted in said mouse of another strain.
- 8. A method of producing a transgenic mouse in whose genome one or both alleles of the corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 gene have been disrupted, said method comprising:
- a) producing positive ES cells by introducing a corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 transgene derived from a mouse corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 gene into embryonic stem cells, said transgene comprising a gene encoding a selectable marker in place of exon 5 through exon 8 of said corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 gene, wherein ES cells that survive and grow under selection for said selectable marker are positive ES cells;
- b) introducing said positive ES cells into C57BL/6 blastocysts;
- c) transferring said blastocysts into pseudopregnant mice; and
- d) identifying transgenic progeny in which one or both alleles of the endogenous corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 gene have been disrupted.
- 9. The method of claim 8 further comprising the step of mating said transgenic mice to produce a transgenic mouse which is homozygous for said transgene.
- 10. A transgenic mouse that can be used in matings to generate the mouse of claim 1, wherein one allele of corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 is disrupted in somatic and germ cells of said mouse.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/079,874, filed Mar. 30, 1998, now abandoned.
FEDERAL FUNDING LEGEND
This invention was produced in part using funds obtained through grant DK-26741 from the National Institutes of Health. Consequently, the federal government has certain rights in this invention.
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
Theiler (in: The House Mouse, Atlas of Embryonic Development, Springer-Verlag, publishers, see pp. 148 and 149, 1989. |