NIH. US: Not only is the ferret (Mustela putorius furo)
adept at navigating a dirt field or threading electrical cables through
piping (in New Zealand, ferrets can be registered as electrician
assistants), this furry 5-pounder ranks as a real heavyweight for
studying respiratory diseases. In fact, much of our current thinking
about influenza is influenced by research with ferrets.
Now, the ferret will stand out even more. As reported online in Nature Biotechnology,
NIH-funded researchers recently sequenced the genome of the sable
ferret, the type that is bred in the United States as a pet. By studying
this genetic blueprint like an explorer would a map, scientists can
perform experiments to learn more systematically how the ferret copes
biologically with common or emerging respiratory pathogens, pointing the
way to improved strategies to preserve the health and well being of
humans and ferrets alike.
The ferret belongs to the Order
Carnivora, along with dogs, cats, bears, and about 280 other species.
But somewhere in the mists of time, the precursor to today’s two ferret
species diverged from its carnivorous cousins to form a unique family,
positioning what became Mustela putorius furo on a rung of the
evolutionary ladder that is of interest to researchers. The ferret is
closer biologically and physiologically to humans than the mouse or the
rat, the traditional go-to animal models for studying hundreds of human
diseases. This makes the ferret an important genomic reference point for
researchers to compare their results between mice and humans, and a
potentially useful model to study certain developmental questions and
cancers.
But where the ferret excels is as a model of the respiratory
diseases. The lungs and airways of a ferret and a human have striking
physiological similarities. This has allowed researchers to study
inherited human respiratory conditions, such as cystic fibrosis, with
the ferret in ways that they can’t do as readily with mice. Perhaps
because of these anatomic and genomic similarities, the ferret contracts
many of the same respiratory viruses that afflict humans (like
influenza), and, like people, they mount vigorous immune responses and
can transmit disease to other ferrets by coughing.
Given all of the above, some researchers have asked for resources to
guide their studies with ferrets. The publication of the ferret genome
marks a critical step forward to fill this need. Other NIH-supported
resources are in development. Work continues to characterize normal gene
expression in various adult ferret tissues and the changes that occur
when various respiratory viruses strike. Another project is cataloguing
the common single nucleotide variations in the ferret’s genetic code,
and work is ongoing to characterize the community of microbes that
colonize its upper respiratory tract and influence their susceptibility
to lung infections.
Reference:
[1] The draft genome sequence of the ferret (Mustela putorius furo) facilitates study of human respiratory disease. Peng X et al. Nat Biotechnol. 2014 Dec;32(12):1250-1255.