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Nuffield Cirriculum Centre

Ethics of Research involving animals

Glossary A-G

Absolutism: The acceptance of or belief in absolute principles in political, philosophical, ethical, or theological matters.

Ascites: The accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity causing swelling.

Adjuvant: A substance which enhances the body’s immune response to an antigen.

Adrenal cortex: Part of adrenal gland which is involved in making steroid hormones such as cortisol.

Alternatives: An alternative is likely to mean an alternative method that does not involve using an animal. This is the principle encompassed by UK and EU laws.

Amino acid: A molecule which serves as the building block of proteins. Proteins have different characteristics as determined by the sequence of amino acids. Genes specify this sequence.

Anaesthesia: Artificially induced loss of consciousness or sensation.

Analgesia: The absence or relief of pain.

Analgesic: A pain relieving medicine.

Anaphylaxis: An extreme and often life-threatening immune reaction to an antigen, such as a bee-sting, owing to hypersensitivity following an earlier exposure.

Antibody: A class of proteins made by the immune system which react with and neutralise specific foreign antigens (any substance recognised by the immune system as ‘non-self’).

Antigen: A foreign substance or cell that triggers an immune response. Its capacity to produce an immune response is referred to as its antigenicity.

Assay: the determination of the content or concentration of a substance.

Ataxia: An inability to coordinate muscular movements.

Autoimmune disorder: A malfunction of the immune system in which it responds against substances and cells naturally present in the body (of animals or humans).

Base pair: A pair of complementary components (called bases) in the two opposing strands of DNA.

Basic research: Research with the primary purpose of advancing scientific knowledge about the way animals behave, develop, or function. Also known as ‘blue-sky’ or ‘curiosity-driven’ research.

Bioavailability: The degree or rate at which a drug or other substance is absorbed and becomes available at its site of action in the body after administration.

Biopharmaceutical: Medicinal drugs produced by biotechnology.

Blastocyst: A very early stage embryo.

Carcinogenicity: Capacity of a substance to cause cancer.

Cell: The structural and functional unit of which organisms
consist.

Cell line: A population of cellsthat can proliferate indefinitely in a culture dish.

Cell culture: Cells maintained in a culture dish.

Cetaceans: Order of marine mammal which comprises whales
and dolphins.

Chimera: An organism made up of cells derived from two genetically distinct organisms.

Chromosome: A large DNA molecule and its associated proteins in the nucleus of a cell. Genes are specific sequences within the DNA molecule.

Circadian: Occurring or recurring about once per day.

Cloning: Gene cloning is the process of amplifying (making further copies of) a single gene sequence. Animal cloning is the process of producing virtually genetically identical animals (clones).

Consequentialism: A philosophical approach by which the moral value of individual human actions, or rules for such actions, is determined primarily by their outcome.

Cortical: Of or relating to the cerebral cortex.

Cortisol: Hormone produced by adrenal cortex, which is often used to assess the degree of stress in an animal.

Cytotoxicity: Toxicity to cells.

Deontology: Philosophical theory in which certain actions are right or wrong independent of their outcome. Instead, their rightness or wrongness is defined by a formal system, which defines certain actions as intrinsically right or wrong.

Disease phenotype: The observable characteristics of a disease.

DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid; genes are specific regions within the DNA molecules that control the inherited characteristics of an organism.

cDNA (Complementary DNA): single-stranded DNA produced from messanger RNA sequences, which means that it contains only the sequences that code for proteins.

Drugs: Medicinal substances.

Efficacy: The ability to produce a particular desired effect.

Embryo: An early stage of animal or plant development.

Endocrine system: A system of glands in the body and the secreted hormones that they produce.

Endogenous opioid: Morphine-like substance which is made naturally within the body.

Endpoint: The stage in an experiment or test where the procedure is terminated. Where experiments increase suffering, animals should be killed as early as possible. This is described as operating a ‘humane endpoint’.

Etiology: The study of the causes of disease.

Euthanasia: Literally: ‘good death’. The act of killing a human or other animal in as painless a way as possible.

Experiment: Part of a methodological research project with the aim of answering a particular theoretical question.

Fecundity: Fertility, the capacity for producing offspring.

Fibroblasts: A common cell type found in vertebrate animals. They are commonly used in experiments, as they proliferate freely in culture.

Gene: A region of DNA that controls an inherited characteristic of an organism.

Gene expression: The process by which information contained in a gene is transcribed to produce functional RNA molecules, which are then translated into proteins. Only a subset of an organism's genes are expressed in any one cell type.

Genotoxicity: Damage to DNA, which may promote the development of cancer or, if it involves the gametes, cause heritable mutations.

Genetics: The inheritance of variation.

Genetic modification: The modification of an organism’s hereditary material using scientific techniques, (also known as genetic engineering).

Genetic screen: A search through a large number of intentionally created mutant organisms for a particular observable characteristic of scientific relevance.

Genome: The total genetic complement of a cell, individual, or species, which is contained in its DNA.

Genomics: The science of studying the DNA sequence and properties of entire genomes (the sequencing of the DNA of the entire human genome is an example).

Genotype: The entire genetic constitution of an individual, as distinguished from their observable characteristics (which are referred to as their phenotype).

Germline: The gametes (eggs or sperm) and the
cells that give rise to the gametes, which transmit genetic material from one generation to the next.

Great apes: An order of primates consisting of gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans.

© NCOB 2004

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