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Services

genetic engineering genetic animals genetic engineering examples

Shanghai Model Organisms offers a full range of model organism services, including model customization services, research-ready models, breeding, phenotyping and drug screening. Mouse, rat, zebrafish and C. elegans models are available to meet different research needs.

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Research on Diseases

genetics diseases studies diseases research diseases

Shanghai Model Organisms provides a professional R&D platform for genetically-engineered mouse, zebrafish and nematode models, a service platform for phenotyping, and a rich repository of disease mouse models to support your studies on disease genetics, pathogenesis, drug treatments, and more.

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P53 CKO Mouse Model

p53 knockout p53 knockout mice p53 gene

Our own-developed mouse model of p53 conditional knockout (p53-CKO) can be mated with mice carrying tissue-specific Cre expression to obtain mice with homozygous deletion of p53 in specific tissues or cells. These mice can be used for tumorigenesis and tumor mechanistic studies.

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Nervous System

neuropsychiatric disorder models parkinson's disease models

The model of nerve injury induced by surgery or drugs can be used to study the mechanism of nerve injury and to evaluate drug efficacy.

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Gene Knock-in

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Knock-in represents the introduction of specific mutations or exogenous genes, such as point mutations (mimicking human genetic disease) at the selected location or reporter genes (e.g., EGFP, RFP, mCherry, YFP, LacZ, Luciferase etc.) or functional cDNAs (such as Cre, Dre etc.) into a specific genomic locus through homologous recombination, thereby allowing the exogenous DNA fragment to be expressed. A simultaneous occurrence of knock-in and knock-out can be achieved by replacing a murine endogenous gene with a foreign DNA fragment.

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Inflammation Models

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Inflammation is a common yet important pathological process. Any factor that may cause tissue damage can lead to inflammation. Anomal inflammatory response may result in chronic inflammation, autoimmune diseases and even cancer. The regulation of inflammation-related genes is an important topic in the study of the development of inflammation.

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