Analyze Diet

Topic:Biochemistry

The study of biochemistry in horses encompasses the chemical processes and substances that occur within equine organisms. This field investigates the molecular interactions and pathways that are fundamental to horse physiology, including metabolism, enzyme activity, and genetic expression. Key areas of interest include the examination of metabolic disorders, nutrient absorption, and the biochemical basis of muscle function and energy production. Researchers utilize biochemical analysis to understand health and disease mechanisms in horses, contributing to the development of diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies. This page gathers peer-reviewed studies and scholarly articles that explore various biochemical processes and their implications for equine health and performance.
Anthelmintic metabolism in parasitic helminths: proteomic insights.
Parasitology    July 10, 2012   Volume 139, Issue 9 1205-1217 doi: 10.1017/S003118201200087X
Brophy PM, MacKintosh N, Morphew RM.Anthelmintics are the cornerstone of parasitic helminth control. Surprisingly, understanding of the biochemical pathways used by parasitic helminths to detoxify anthelmintics is fragmented, despite the increasing global threat of anthelmintic resistance within the ruminant and equine industries. Reductionist biochemistry has likely over-estimated the enzymatic role of glutathione transferases in anthelmintic metabolism and neglected the potential role of the cytochrome P-450 superfamily (CYPs). Proteomic technologies offers the opportunity to support genomics, reverse genetics and pharmacokine...
Comparative study of depth-dependent characteristics of equine and human osteochondral tissue from the medial and lateral femoral condyles.
Osteoarthritis and cartilage    July 7, 2012   Volume 20, Issue 10 1147-1151 doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2012.06.005
Malda J, Benders KE, Klein TJ, de Grauw JC, Kik MJ, Hutmacher DW, Saris DB, van Weeren PR, Dhert WJ.Articular cartilage defects are common after joint injuries. When left untreated, the biomechanical protective function of cartilage is gradually lost, making the joint more susceptible to further damage, causing progressive loss of joint function and eventually osteoarthritis (OA). In the process of translating promising tissue-engineering cartilage repair approaches from bench to bedside, pre-clinical animal models including mice, rabbits, goats, and horses, are widely used. The equine species is becoming an increasingly popular model for the in vivo evaluation of regenerative orthopaedic ap...
Expansion under hypoxic conditions enhances the chondrogenic potential of equine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    July 6, 2012   Volume 195, Issue 2 248-251 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2012.06.008
Ranera B, Remacha AR, Álvarez-Arguedas S, Castiella T, Vázquez FJ, Romero A, Zaragoza P, Martín-Burriel I, Rodellar C.Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) are widely used in regenerative medicine in horses. Most of the molecular characterisations of BM-MSCs have been made at 20% O(2), a higher oxygen level than the one surrounding the cells inside the bone marrow. The present work compares the lifespan and the tri-lineage potential of equine BM-MSCs expanded in normoxia (20% O(2)) and hypoxia (5% O(2)). No significant differences were found in long-term cultures for osteogenesis and adipogenesis between normoxic and hypoxic expanded BM-MSCs. An up-regulation of the chondrogenesis-related genes...
Contractile responses of isolated equine digital arteries under hypoxic or hyperoxic conditions in vitro: role of reactive oxygen species and Rho kinase.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    July 4, 2012   Volume 36, Issue 3 267-274 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.2012.01423.x
Borer KE, Bailey SR, Harris PA, Elliott J.The underlying pathophysiological triggers for equine acute laminitis are unknown, although digital vasoconstriction, ischaemia, hypoxia and reperfusion injury may be involved. The contractile responses of isolated equine digital arteries (EDAs), harvested from the hindlimbs of normal horses postmortem at an abattoir, were studied acutely (up to 3 h) under hyperoxic (95% oxygen, 5% CO2 ) and hypoxic (95% nitrogen, 5% CO2 ) conditions in organ baths. Phenylephrine (PHE; 10(-6) m), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT; 10(-7) m) and high potassium (K(+) ; 118 mm) caused contraction in EDAs which was signif...
Presumed case of “stiff-horse syndrome” caused by decreased gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) production in an American Paint mare.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    July 4, 2012   Volume 53, Issue 1 75-78 
Purcell TB, Sellers AD, Goehring LS.Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) converts glutamic acid into the inhibitory neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Increased serum GAD (auto) antibody concentrations were found in a mare with increased postural musculature tone resulting in stiffness and recumbence. The mare was treated with dexamethasone which resulted in resolution of clinical signs and decreased GAD antibody concentrations. La glutamate décarboxylase (GAD) convertit l’acide glutamique en acide gamma-aminobutyrique (GABA), un inhibiteur des neurotransmetteurs. Des concentrations sériques accrues d’anticorps (a...
Effects of Platelet-Rich Plasma Composition on Anabolic and Catabolic Activities in Equine Cartilage and Meniscal Explants.
Cartilage    July 1, 2012   Volume 3, Issue 3 245-254 doi: 10.1177/1947603511433181
Kisiday JD, McIlwraith CW, Rodkey WG, Frisbie DD, Steadman JR.To evaluate the effects of single- and double-spin preparations of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) on anabolic and catabolic activities of cartilage and meniscal explants in vitro. Methods: Single- and double-spin PRP was prepared using laboratory processing or commercial kits. The cellular contents were quantified, and each PRP was mixed in equal quantities with cell culture medium and added to cartilage or meniscus explant cultures, with or without interleukin 1 β (IL-1β). Extracellular matrix synthesis was quantified over 24 hours via (35)S-sulfate and (3)H-proline incorporation, while gene ex...
Distribution and processing of a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4, aggrecan, versican, and hyaluronan in equine digital laminae.
American journal of veterinary research    June 29, 2012   Volume 73, Issue 7 1035-1046 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.7.1035
Pawlak E, Wang L, Johnson PJ, Nuovo G, Taye A, Belknap JK, Alfandari D, Black SJ.To determine the expression and distribution of a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4 (ADAMTS-4), its substrates aggrecan and versican, and their binding partner hyaluronan in laminae of healthy horses. Methods: Laminae from the forelimb hooves of 8 healthy horses. Methods: Real-time quantitative PCR assay was used for gene expression analysis. Hyaluronidase, chondroitinase, and keratanase digestion of lamina extracts combined with SDS-PAGE and western blotting were used for protein and proteoglycan analysis. Immunofluorescent and immunohistochemical staining of tiss...
Effects of cleavage by a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4 on gene expression and protein content of versican and aggrecan in the digital laminae of horses with starch gruel-induced laminitis.
American journal of veterinary research    June 29, 2012   Volume 73, Issue 7 1047-1056 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.7.1047
Wang L, Pawlak E, Johnson PJ, Belknap JK, Alfandari D, Black SJ.To determine whether increased gene expression of a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs-4 (ADAMTS-4) in laminae of horses with starch gruel-induced laminitis was accompanied by increased enzyme activity and substrate degradation. Methods: Laminae from the forelimb hooves of 8 healthy horses and 17 horses with starch gruel-induced laminitis (6 at onset of fever, 6 at onset of Obel grade 1 lameness, and 5 at onset of Obel grade 3 lameness). Methods: Gene expression was determined by use of cDNA and real-time quantitative PCR assay. Protein expression and processing were ...
Activation of equine platelet-rich plasma: comparison of methods and characterization of equine autologous thrombin.
Veterinary surgery : VS    June 28, 2012   Volume 41, Issue 7 784-794 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2012.01016.x
Textor JA, Tablin F.To investigate and compare clinically relevant Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) activation methods. Methods: Experimental. Methods: PRP was prepared from 6 equine subjects. Activation of the PRP was performed by 4 methods (autologous thrombin, bovine thrombin, calcium chloride (CaCl(2) ), or freeze-thaw). The resultant PDGF-BB (where PDGF is platelet-derived growth factor) and TGFβ1 (where TGFβ is transforming growth factor beta) levels in PRP releasates were quantified by Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and compared. Growth factor contents were also compared between platelet-rich clots ...
The development and validation of a turbulent flow chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method for the endogenous steroid profiling of equine serum.
Journal of chromatography. B, Analytical technologies in the biomedical and life sciences    June 26, 2012   Volume 905 1-9 doi: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2012.06.021
Moeller BC, Stanley SD.A method for the detection and quantitation of 35 endogenous steroids in equine serum was developed and validated. Androgens, estrogens, progestins and their metabolites potentially present in serum were simultaneously monitored in one method using on-line sample extraction by turbulent flow chromatography (TFC) on a 2-dimensional liquid chromatography system and detected on a triple-stage quadrupole mass spectrometer by electrospray ionization. Analytes were detected and quantitated by single-reaction monitoring or selected-ion monitoring. Limits of detection (range 0.025-10 ng mL(-1)) and qu...
The effect of storage on whole blood chemiluminescence measurement of equine neutrophils.
Luminescence : the journal of biological and chemical luminescence    June 22, 2012   Volume 28, Issue 3 327-331 doi: 10.1002/bio.2385
Krumrych W, Skórzewski R, Malinowski E.The aim of this study was to determine the effect of duration and temperature of sample storage on whole blood chemiluminescence measurement results. Venous blood from 18 clinically healthy Polish half-bred horses aged 4 to 11 years were used in the study. Luminol dependent chemiluminescence (CL) was used to measure neutrophil oxygen metabolism in whole blood. Blood samples were examined for spontaneous CL and stimulated by a surface receptor stimulus as well as extra-receptor stimulus. The assay was performed in two parallel experimental sets with samples stored at 4 and 22 °C, respectively....
Equine luteal function regulation may depend on the interaction between cytokines and vascular endothelial growth factor: an in vitro study.
Biology of reproduction    June 22, 2012   Volume 86, Issue 6 187 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.111.097147
Galvão A, Henriques S, Pestka D, Lukasik K, Skarzynski D, Mateus LM, Ferreira-Dias GM.We hypothesized that cytokines influence luteal angiogenesis in mares, while angiogenic factors themselves can also regulate luteal secretory capacity. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of cytokines--tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF), interferon gamma (IFNG) and Fas ligand (FASL)--on in vitro modulation of angiogenic activity and mRNA level of vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF), its receptor VEGFR2, thrombospondin 1 (TSP1), and its receptor CD36 in equine corpus luteum (CL) throughout the luteal phase. After treatment, VEGF protein expression was determined...
A simplified but robust method for the isolation of avian and mammalian muscle satellite cells.
BMC cell biology    June 21, 2012   Volume 13 16 doi: 10.1186/1471-2121-13-16
Baquero-Perez B, Kuchipudi SV, Nelli RK, Chang KC.Current methods of isolation of muscle satellite cells from different animal species are highly variable making inter-species comparisons problematic. This variation mainly stems from the use of different proteolytic enzymes to release the satellite cells from the muscle tissue (sometimes a single enzyme is used but often a combination of enzymes is preferred) and the different extracellular matrix proteins used to coat culture ware. In addition, isolation of satellite cells is frequently laborious and sometimes may require pre-plating of the cell preparation on uncoated flasks or Percoll cent...
Bone mineral density and bone mineral content of the bilateral first phalanges of the thoracic limbs in horses.
Polish journal of veterinary sciences    June 20, 2012   Volume 15, Issue 1 159-161 doi: 10.2478/v10181-011-0128-2
Dzierzecka M, Charuta A.The bone mineral density (BMD) and the bone mineral content (BMC) in the bone tissue of the bilateral first phalanges of horses' thoracic limbs were analysed. The research material consisted of isolated pastern bones derived from 22 horses. The research was conducted with the use of a Norland model Excell Plus densitometer (Fort Atkinson WI, USA), using affinited beam X-ray technology and an animal research programme (Research Scan, 3.9.6. version) at the following parameters: scanning resolution of 1.5 x 1.5 mm, scanning speed 60 mm/s. The differences between BMC and BMD values in bilateral f...
Clinical, hematologic, and electrolyte changes with 0.9% sodium chloride or acetated fluids in endurance horses.
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)    June 19, 2012   Volume 22, Issue 3 327-331 doi: 10.1111/j.1476-4431.2012.00745.x
Fielding CL, Magdesian KG, Meier CA, Rhodes DM.To describe the clinical and laboratory changes associated with the use of IV0.9% sodium chloride and a commercially available acetated fluid (CAF) to treat endurance horses requiring emergency medical treatment. Methods: Randomized, controlled clinical trial from 2007 to 2010. Methods: Emergency treatment centers of the Western States 100-mile (220 km) endurance ride. Methods: Twelve horses requiring emergency medical treatment in the form of IVfluids completed the study. Methods: Horses were assigned to either the 0.9% sodium chloride group (6 horses) or CAF group (6 horses) and received a t...
Equine multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD) associated with seasonal pasture myopathy in the midwestern United States.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    June 18, 2012   Volume 26, Issue 4 1012-1018 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.2012.00957.x
Sponseller BT, Valberg SJ, Schultz NE, Bedford H, Wong DM, Kersh K, Shelton GD.Seasonal pasture myopathy (SPM) is a highly fatal form of nonexertional rhabdomyolysis that occurs in pastured horses in the United States during autumn or spring. In Europe, a similar condition, atypical myopathy (AM), is common. Recently, a defect of lipid metabolism, multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD), has been identified in horses with AM. Objective: To determine if SPM in the United States is caused by MADD. Methods: Six horses diagnosed with SPM based on history, clinical signs, and serum creatine kinase activity, or postmortem findings. Methods: Retrospective descriptive ...
[Antioxidant properties of proteins after freezing-thawing].
Ukrains'kyi biokhimichnyi zhurnal (1999 )    June 12, 2012   Volume 84, Issue 1 53-59 
Rozanova SL, Rozanova ED, Nardid OA.Experimental data are presented which were obtained under comparative evaluation of influence of different freezing-thawing conditions on antioxidant properties of isolated proteins: human serum albumin, cytochrome c from the horse heart and glucose oxidase from Aspergillus niger. The observed protein antioxidant activity alterations are assumed to be a result of protein conformational changes. The character of freezing-thawing influence on the protein antioxidant activity depends on the molecular structure and cooling conditions.
Expression of urocortin and corticotropin-releasing hormone receptors in the horse thyroid gland.
Cell and tissue research    June 12, 2012   Volume 350, Issue 1 45-53 doi: 10.1007/s00441-012-1450-4
Squillacioti C, De Luca A, Alì S, Paino S, Liguori G, Mirabella N.Urocortin (UCN) is a 40-amino-acid peptide and a member of the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) family, which includes CRH, urotensin I, sauvagine, UCN2 and UCN3. The biological actions of CRH family peptides are mediated via two types of G-protein-coupled receptors, namely CRH type 1 receptor (CRHR1) and CRH type 2 receptor (CRHR2). The biological effects of these peptides are mediated and modulated not only by CRH receptors but also via a highly conserved CRH-binding protein (CRHBP). Our aim was to investigate the expression of UCN, CRHR1, CRHR2 and CRHBP by immunohistochemistry, Wester...
Behavioural and electrophysiological responses of females of two species of tabanid to volatiles in urine of different mammals.
Medical and veterinary entomology    June 11, 2012   Volume 27, Issue 1 77-85 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2915.2012.01022.x
Baldacchino F, Cadier J, Porciani A, Buatois B, Dormont L, Jay-Robert P.Urine volatiles from different ungulates (cows, horses and sheep) were tested as bait for tabanids in southeastern France using Nzi traps during the early summer of 2011. Tabanus bromius Linnaeus, 1758 and Atylotus quadrifarius (Loew, 1874) (both: Diptera: Tabanidae) were the most captured species, respectively representing 57% and 41% of all tabanids collected (all of which were female). Horse urine significantly increased catches of T. bromius (1.6-fold) and A. quadrifarius (3.5-fold), and sheep urine significantly increased catches of A. quadrifarius (2.5-fold). In parallel, an electroanten...
Dynamics of circulating progesterone concentrations before and during luteolysis: a comparison between cattle and horses.
Biology of reproduction    June 7, 2012   Volume 86, Issue 6 170 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod.112.099820
Ginther OJ, Beg MA.The profile of circulating progesterone concentration is more dynamic in cattle than in horses. Greater prominence of progesterone fluctuations in cattle than in horses reflect periodic interplay in cattle between pulses of a luteotropin (luteinizing hormone; LH) and pulses of a luteolysin (prostaglandin F2alpha; PGF2alpha). A dose of PGF2alpha that induces complete regression of a mature corpus luteum with a single treatment in cattle or horses is an overdose. The overdose effects on the progesterone profile in cattle are an immediate nonphysiological increase taking place over about 30 min, ...
Structural and immunologic characterization of bovine, horse, and rabbit serum albumins.
Molecular immunology    June 6, 2012   Volume 52, Issue 3-4 174-182 doi: 10.1016/j.molimm.2012.05.011
Majorek KA, Porebski PJ, Dayal A, Zimmerman MD, Jablonska K, Stewart AJ, Chruszcz M, Minor W.Serum albumin (SA) is the most abundant plasma protein in mammals. SA is a multifunctional protein with extraordinary ligand binding capacity, making it a transporter molecule for a diverse range of metabolites, drugs, nutrients, metals and other molecules. Due to its ligand binding properties, albumins have wide clinical, pharmaceutical, and biochemical applications. Albumins are also allergenic, and exhibit a high degree of cross-reactivity due to significant sequence and structure similarity of SAs from different organisms. Here we present crystal structures of albumins from cattle (BSA), h...
Effects of serial harvest of plasma on total plasma protein and total immunoglobulin G concentrations in donor horses involved in a plasmapheresis program.
American journal of veterinary research    May 25, 2012   Volume 73, Issue 6 770-774 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.6.770
Ziska SM, Schumacher J, Duran SH, Brock KV.To determine the effects of intensive serial plasmapheresis on total plasma protein and total IgG concentrations in donor horses involved in a plasmapheresis program. Methods: 18 horses (13 mares and 5 geldings; 13 Belgians, 3 Percherons, 1 Standardbred, and 1 warmblood) ranging from 7 to 14 years of age (mean ± SD, 10 ± 3 years) and weighing 822 ± 128 kg. Methods: Horses from which 22 mL of plasma/kg of donor body weight was harvested at 14-day intervals for a minimum of 8 consecutive plasmapheresis donations were retrospectively selected for use in the evaluation. Automated plasmapheresis...
Effect of repeated oral administration of glucose and leucine immediately after exercise on plasma insulin concentration and glycogen synthesis in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 25, 2012   Volume 73, Issue 6 867-874 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.6.867
Bröjer JT, Nostell KE, Essén-Gustavsson B, Hedenström UO.To determine whether repeated oral administration of glucose and leucine during the period immediately after intense exercise would increase the release of insulin and thereby enhance glycogen synthesis in horses. Methods: 12 Standardbred horses. Methods: In a crossover study design, after glycogen-depleting exercise, horses received oral boluses of glucose (1 g/kg at 0, 2, and 4 hours) and leucine (0.1 g/kg at 0 and 4 hours) or boluses of water (10 mL/kg at 0, 2, and 4 hours; control treatment). Blood samples for determination of glucose, insulin, and leucine concentrations were collected pri...
A method for proteomic analysis of equine subchondral bone and epiphyseal cartilage.
Proteomics    May 25, 2012   Volume 12, Issue 11 1870-1874 doi: 10.1002/pmic.201100366
Desjardin C, Balliau T, Valot B, Zivy M, Wimel L, Guérin G, Cribiu E, Schibler L.Proteomic analyses of cartilage and, to a lesser extent, of bone have long been impaired because of technical challenges related to their structure and biochemical properties. We have developed a unified method based on phenol extraction, 2DE, silver staining, and subsequent LC-MS/MS. This method proved to be efficient to characterize the proteome of equine cartilage and bone samples collected in vivo. Since proteins from several cellular compartments could be recovered, our procedure is mainly suitable for in situ molecular physiology studies focused on the cellular content of chondrocytes, o...
Effects of clenbuterol administration on serum biochemical, histologic, and echocardiographic measurements of muscle injury in exercising horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 25, 2012   Volume 73, Issue 6 875-883 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.73.6.875
Thompson JA, Eades SC, Chapman AM, Paulsen DB, Barker SA, McConnico RS.To determine the effects of clenbuterol, at a dosage of up to 3.2 μg/kg for 14 days, PO, on skeletal and cardiac muscle in healthy horses undergoing treadmill exercise. Methods: 12 healthy horses from 3 to 10 years old. Methods: Horses were randomly assigned to a control group (n = 6) or clenbuterol group (6) and received either saline (0.9% NaCl) solution or clenbuterol, PO, every 12 hours for 14 days. Horses were subjected to submaximal treadmill exercise daily during treatment. Muscle biopsy specimens were collected before and after treatment for determination of apoptosis. Echocardiograph...
Calcium/calmodulin and cAMP/protein kinase-A pathways regulate sperm motility in the stallion.
Animal reproduction science    May 24, 2012   Volume 132, Issue 3-4 169-177 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2012.05.007
Lasko J, Schlingmann K, Klocke A, Mengel GA, Turner R.In spite of the importance of sperm motility to fertility in the stallion, little is known about the signaling pathways that regulate motility in this species. In other mammals, calcium/calmodulin signaling and the cyclic AMP/protein kinase-A pathway are involved in sperm motility regulation. We hypothesized that these pathways also were involved in the regulation of sperm motility in the stallion. Using immunoblotting, calmodulin and the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II β were shown to be present in stallion sperm and with indirect immunofluorescence calmodulin was localized to the acr...
An explant based-method for differentiating adipocytes from equine adipose tissue.
Equine veterinary journal    May 20, 2012   Volume 45, Issue 1 114-116 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2012.00581.x
Suagee JK, Corl BA.Culturing adipocytes enables fine control of experimental conditions and helps minimise animal use. This report describes an explant-based method for isolating stromal-vascular cells from equine adipose tissue that enables use of small amounts of tissue. Subcutaneous and mesenteric adipose tissues were harvested post mortem and stromal-vascular cells grown from explants, prior to testing the capacity of several differentiation media to induce lipid droplet formation and increase transcript abundance of adipocyte markers. Inclusion of rosiglitazone at 1 and 5 µmol/l concentrations, along with ...
p-Cresol: a sex pheromone component identified from the estrous urine of mares.
Journal of chemical ecology    May 18, 2012   Volume 38, Issue 7 811-813 doi: 10.1007/s10886-012-0138-2
Būda V, Mozūraitis R, Kutra J, Borg-Karlson AK.Previously it was shown that m- and p-cresols in the urine of mares exhibits a temporally reproducible pattern that is dependent on ovarian activity and, thus, provides information about the timing of ovulation. New behavioral data demonstrate 1) that stallions spend significantly more time sniffing p-cresol as compared to o-, and m-cresols, and, 2) that the extent of stallions' erections differ significantly in response to different types of samples. The lowest erection level was recorded for the pure-water control, a moderate erection level was elicited by the urine of diestrous mares, and t...
Rapid and sensitive analysis of 3,4-methylenedioxypyrovalerone in equine plasma using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Journal of analytical toxicology    May 15, 2012   Volume 36, Issue 5 327-333 doi: 10.1093/jat/bks033
Wang CC, Hartmann-Fischbach P, Krueger TR, Wells TL, Feineman AR, Compton JC.3,4-Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) is a psychoactive drug with potent stimulant properties and potential for abuse and drug dependency. MDPV was recently classified as a Class I drug by Racing Commissioners International, indicating that it is a banned substance in equine athletes because it lacks therapeutic value in horses. To enforce this ban, a sensitive and fast liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method was needed. It is for this reason that this method was developed for quantification and confirmation of MDPV in equine plasma. Sample preparation involved liquid-liquid extr...
mRNA transcription of prostaglandin synthases and their products in the equine endometrium in the course of fibrosis.
Theriogenology    May 11, 2012   Volume 78, Issue 4 768-776 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2012.03.024
Szóstek AZ, Siemieniuch MJ, Lukasik K, Galvão AM, Ferreira-Dias GM, Skarzynski DJ.Accurate regulation of the reproductive cycle and successful implantation depend on proper functioning of the endometrium. The aim of this study was to determine whether mRNA transcription of specific enzymes responsible for prostaglandin (PG) synthesis (prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase, PTGS-2; prostaglandin F(2α) synthase, PGFS; and prostaglandin E(2) synthases, PGES) and PG concentrations in endometrial extracts would change in moderate (Kenney's Category II) and severe phases of fibrosis (Kenney's Category III; endometrosis), compared with healthy endometrium (Kenney's Category I), dur...
1 62 63 64 65 66 258