Citation only
via OpenAlex
Spontaneous Histologic Lesions of the Adult Naked Mole Rat ( <i>Heterocephalus glaber</i> )
Martha A. Delaney, Lee Nagy, Michael J. Kinsel, P. M. Treuting
Veterinary Pathology · 2013 · ▲ 114 citations
Abstract
Naked mole rats (NMRs; Heterocephalus glaber) are highly adapted, subterranean, eusocial rodents from semiarid regions of the eastern horn of Africa and the longest-living rodent known with a maximum life span of up to 30 years. They are a unique model for aging research due to their physiology, extreme longevity, and, when compared to mice and rats, resistance to cancer. Published surveys of disease in NMRs are sparse. Captive colonies in zoological collections provide an opportunity to monitor spontaneous disease over time in a seminatural environment. This retrospective study describes common lesions of a zoo population over a 15-year period during which 138 adult NMRs were submitted for gross and histologic evaluation. Of these, 61 (44.2%) were male, 77 (55.8%) female, 45 (32.6%) died, and 93 (67.4%) were euthanized. The most frequent cause of death or reason for euthanasia was conspecific trauma (bite wounds) and secondary complications. Some common histologic lesions and their prevalence were renal tubular mineralization (82.6%), hepatic hemosiderosis (64.5%), bite wounds (63.8%), chronic progressive nephropathy (52.9%), and calcinosis cutis (10.1%). In sum, 104 (75.4%) NMRs had more than one of the most prevalent histologic lesions. No malignant neoplasms were noted; however, there was a case of renal tubular adenomatous hyperplasia with nuclear atypia and compression that in rats is considered a preneoplastic lesion. This retrospective study confirms the NMR's relative resistance to cancer in spite of development of other degenerative diseases and highlights the utility of zoological databases for baseline pathological data on nontraditional animal models.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1177/0300985812471543
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-07-07 MST
Cite this
APA
Delaney, M.A., Nagy, L., Kinsel, M.J., & Treuting, P.M. (2013). Spontaneous Histologic Lesions of the Adult Naked Mole Rat ( <i>Heterocephalus glaber</i> ). <em>Veterinary Pathology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1177/0300985812471543
Vancouver
Delaney MA, Nagy L, Kinsel MJ, Treuting PM. Spontaneous Histologic Lesions of the Adult Naked Mole Rat ( <i>Heterocephalus glaber</i> ). Veterinary Pathology. 2013. doi:10.1177/0300985812471543.
BibTeX
@article{martha2013Sponta,
title = {Spontaneous Histologic Lesions of the Adult Naked Mole Rat ( <i>Heterocephalus glaber</i> )},
author = {Martha A. Delaney and Lee Nagy and Michael J. Kinsel and P. M. Treuting},
journal = {Veterinary Pathology},
year = {2013},
doi = {10.1177/0300985812471543},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Veterinary Pathology 2015
Citation only
Renal Pathology in a Nontraditional Aging Model
Biochemistry (Moscow) 2017
Open access · OA
Spontaneous and experimentally induced pathologies in the naked mole rat (Heterocephalus glaber)
Annual Review of Animal Biosciences 2022
Open access · CC-BY
The Naked Mole-Rat as a Model for Healthy Aging
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2012
Open access · OA
Cancer resistance in the blind mole rat is mediated by concerted necrotic cell death mechanism
Molecular Cancer 2024
Open access · CC-BY
Aging and cancer
Genes & Development 2008
Open access · OA