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Improving laboratory animal genetic reporting: LAG-R guidelines

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Authors

Teboul, Lydia; Amos-Landgraf, James; Benavides, Fernando J.; Birling, Marie-Christine; Brown, Steve D. M.; Bryda, Elizabeth; Bunton-Stasyshyn, Rosie; Chin, Hsian-Jean; Crispo, Martina; Delerue, Fabien; Dobbie, Michael; Franklin, Craig L.; Fuchtbauer, Ernst-Martin; Gao, Xiang; Golzio, Christelle; Haffner, Rebecca; Herault, Yann; Hrabe de Angelis, Martin; Lloyd, Kevin C. Kent; Magnuson, Terry R.; Montoliu, Lluis; Murray, Stephen A.; Nam, Ki-Hoan; Nutter, Lauryl M. J.; Pailhoux, Eric; Pardo Manuel de Villena, Fernando; Peterson, Kevin; Reinholdt, Laura; Sedlacek, Radislav; Seong, Je Kyung; Shiroishi, Toshihiko; Smith, Cynthia; Takeo, Toru; Tinsley, Louise; Vilotte, Jean-Luc; Warming, Soren; Wells, Sara; Whitelaw, C. Bruce; Yoshiki, Atsushi; Wang, Chi-Kuang; Marvel, Jacqueline; Zarubica, Ana; Heaney, Jason; Korf, Ian F.; Lutz, Cathleen (Cat); Kueh, Andrew J.; Thomas, Paul Q.; Arkell, Ruth M.; Mann, Graham J.; Pavlovic, Guillaume

Issue Date
2024-07
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Communications, Vol.15 No.1, p. 5574
Abstract
The biomedical research community addresses reproducibility challenges in animal studies through standardized nomenclature, improved experimental design, transparent reporting, data sharing, and centralized repositories. The ARRIVE guidelines outline documentation standards for laboratory animals in experiments, but genetic information is often incomplete. To remedy this, we propose the Laboratory Animal Genetic Reporting (LAG-R) framework. LAG-R aims to document animals' genetic makeup in scientific publications, providing essential details for replication and appropriate model use. While verifying complete genetic compositions may be impractical, better reporting and validation efforts enhance reliability of research. LAG-R standardization will bolster reproducibility, peer review, and overall scientific rigor. Reproducibility is key to all fields of research, and in the case of animal research, this can be hampered by inconsistent reporting of animal genetics. Here the authors propose a reporting framework and guidelines designed to discuss the validation and standardise the reporting of genetic backgrounds and genetic alterations in animal models.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/204925
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49439-y
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