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Model-Dependent Renal Phenotypes in Diabetic Kidney Disease: Comparative Histopathological Characterization of Commonly Used Animal Models

Created on 09 Jul 2026

Authors

Rezaei, R., Naimi, A., Gheisari, Y., Ramazani, Z., S. Al-Amri, I., Doustmohammadi, H., Jamshidi-adegani, F., Al-Hashmi, S.

Abstract

Background: Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) remains a leading cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide, characterized by progressive structural and metabolic alterations secondary to chronic hyperglycemia. While numerous type 1 and type 2 rodent models have been developed to study the pathophysiology of DKD, no single model perfectly recapitulates the full clinical spectrum of human disease. The selection of an optimal model depends deeply on the specific research objective, as phenotypic expression and histopathological severity vary significantly across different strains and induction methods. The present study provides a comparative analysis of the renal histological of three widely utilized murine models: the chemically induced streptozotocin (STZ) model and the genetic Akita (type 1) and db/db (type 2) models. Methods: Male STZ-induced (28 weeks post-induction), heterozygous Akita (28 weeks old), and db/db mice at two different age intervals (18-21 and 16-24 weeks old) were assessed. Renal injury was quantified using four light-microscopic parameters: glomerulomegaly, mesangial hypercellularity, tubular vacuolization and arteriolar hyalinosis. Due to observed discrepancies between metabolic and structural findings in the db/db strain, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was employed for subcellular characterization. Results: All models exhibited significant hyperglycemia and albuminuria. At the light-microscopic level, STZ and Akita mice demonstrated consistent and pronounced renal lesions. In contrast, db/db mice despite increasing albuminuria and obesity, light microscopy revealed heterogeneous and inconsistent histopathological changes. However, TEM analysis of db/db mice kidneys successfully captured early ultrastructural injury, including irregular glomerular basement membrane (GBM) thickening and focal podocyte foot process effacement, which were undetectable by light microscopy. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the Akita and STZ-induced models exhibit prominent structural alterations detectable by conventional light microscopy, whereas the db/db model requires ultrastructural evaluation by TEM to reliably confirm renal injury. This study underscores the limitation of routine histology in certain type 2 diabetes models and highlights the complementary value of TEM for accurate histopathological characterization. Collectively, the alternative histopathological markers identified herein offer sensitive and readily accessible indices for monitoring early-to-moderate DKD progression, providing a more robust framework for preclinical model selection and therapeutic evaluation in future studies.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 09 Jul 2026.

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