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Topic:Cells

The study of cells in horses encompasses the examination of various cell types and their functions within the equine body. Cells are the basic structural and functional units of life, and in horses, they contribute to numerous physiological processes, including growth, repair, and immune responses. Different cell types, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, and muscle cells, each perform specific roles that are vital for maintaining the health and homeostasis of the horse. This topic includes research on cellular mechanisms, cellular responses to disease or injury, and the application of cellular biology in equine medicine. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the structure, function, and significance of cells in equine biology and health.
Development of pituitary and adrenal glands in the fetal horse.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 553-556 
Samuel CA, Allen WR, Steven DH.The various cell types in the adult anterior pituitary may be distinguished at the ultrastructural level of the sizes of the secretory granules within the cytoplasm. In the fetal adenohypophysis, with the exception of prolactin-producing cells, all types may be identified after Day 100 of gestation. Morphological evidence suggests that they are producing and secreting trophic hormones. The three constituent layers of the adrenal cortex are also discernible by Day 100 of pregnancy. The cells of the zona glomerulosa have large numbers of darkly stained inclusions within the cytoplasm. The zona f...
Origin and histogenesis of equine endometrial cups.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 391-395 
Moor RM, Allen WR, Hamilton DW.Biochemical and morphological studies were carried out to determine the origin and histogenesis of endometrial cups in mares. A wide range of fetal and maternal tissues were cultured in vitro and their ability to secrete gonadotrophin (PMSG) was monitored. High levels of PMSG were produced in culture only by cells from the restricted area of the equine trophoblast known as the chorionic girdle which is an annular band of highly specialized cells at the junction of the allantois and the regressing yolk sac. The morphological appearance of girdle cells after cultivation in vitro and after alloge...
The fine structure of the glycocalyx of equine spermatozoa: a high-resolution cytochemical study.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 91-94 
Hernández-Jáuregui P, Sosa A, González-Angulo A.Equine spermatozoa were obtained from ejaculates of young stallions. The seminal plasma was removed and the sperm pellets washed three times with 0-15 M-NaCl solution before final centrifugation at 4500 g for 15 min. The pellets were fixed in a mixture of 2-5% glutaraldehyde in 0-1 M-cacodylate buffer, pH 7-4, with 0-5% Alcian blue and post-fixed in 1% osmium tetroxide with 1% lanthanum nitrate; other samples were treated with ruthenium red. All samples were dehydrated in ascending concentrations of ethanol, embedded in araldite and thin sections examined in an electron microscope. Electron de...
An ultrastructural and histochemical study of the interstitial cells in the gonads of the fetal horse.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 557-561 
Hay MF, Allen WR.Gonadal tissue obtained at about 50-day intervals from Days 60 to 300 of gestation was examined histologically, histochemically and in the electron microscope. The marked enlargement of the gonads (ovaries or testes) reached a peak around Day 250 and was caused by hypertrophy and hypoplasia of interstitial cells. These cells had all the ultrastructural characteristics of a steroid-secreting cell but delta5-3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3beta-HSD) was not detected at any stage of their development. There was no significant change in the ultrastructure of the interstitial cells between Day...
Identification of multiple equine infectious anemia antigens by immunodiffusion reactions.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    October 1, 1975   Volume 39, Issue 4 411-415 
Malmquist WA, Becvar CS.Equine infectious anemia (EIA) cell antigens prepared from infected equine spleen, equine leukocyte cultures or a persistently infected equine dermis cell line contained at least two serologically reacting components. For convenience one component was designated as soluble antigen (SA) and the other as cell-associated antigen (CAA). The SA appeared as a single component when it was prepared from EIA virus precipitated from infectious tissue culture fluid with polyethylene glycol and ether treated but it was mixed with CAA when the source was infected cells. Cytolytic or mechanical disruption o...
Morphology and histochemistry of the endometrial cup.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 397-400 
Yamauchi S.The luminal and cut surface of endometrial cups were examined by scanning electron microscopy. The distribution of PAS-positive and lipid materials in cup tissue was studied and most of the lipid material was localized in the large polyhedral cup cells. The lipid droplets gave positive reactions for DNPH in the cholesterol test of Schultz. They also exhibited autofluorescence and were therefore considered to be steroidal in nature. The significance of this possibility, particularly with regard to maintenance of early pregnancy in the mare, is discussed.
Oxytalan-type fibers in the developing human and equine temporomandibular joint.
Journal of dental research    September 1, 1975   Volume 54, Issue 5 1088 doi: 10.1177/00220345750540051501
Luke DA.No abstract available
Studies in atypical Streptococcus equi.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1975   Volume 19, Issue 2 115-119 
Woolcock JB.An atypical variety of Streptococcus equi is described. It was shown to be deficient in capsular material, to be very virulent for mice and to possess a cell-wall protein similar to the M-like protein of classical Str equi. Antiserum prepared against classical Str equi effectively opsonised the atypical strains, and induced the formation of long chains by these atypical strains. It is possible that this variant of Str equi can be used to overcome many of the current problems associated with the manufacture and use of strangles vaccines.
Long chain base and fatty acid compositions of equine kidney sphingolipids.
Journal of biochemistry    September 1, 1975   Volume 78, Issue 3 527-536 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a130937
Hara A, Taketomi T.Equine renal glycopshingolipids were composed of galactocerebroside, glucocerbroside, ceramide dihexoside, ceramide trihexoside, sulfatide, globoside I, Forssman globoside, and hematoside. Free ceramide and sphingomyelin were also found in equine kidney. Their long chain bases consisted of sphingosine, dihydrosphingosine, C18-phytosphingosine, and C20-phytosphingosine, whereas the fatty acids were separated into two groups: nonhydroxy and hydroxy fatty acids. Ceramide monohexoside was separated into five spots by TLC on borax-impregnated plates. The major component of ceramide monohexoside was...
Conformational energy refinement of horse-heart ferricytochrome c.
Biochemistry    August 12, 1975   Volume 14, Issue 16 3509-3517 doi: 10.1021/bi00687a001
Warme PK, Scheraga HA.The reported X-ray structure of horse-heart ferricytochrome c has been refined by conformational energy calculations, using a three-stage computational procedure. In stage I, the atomic positions are adjusted to conform to idealized bond lengths and bond angles characteristic of small amino acid derivatives, while yet remaining as close as possible to the X-ray coordinates. In stage II, atomic overlaps are eliminated by adjusting the backbone and side-chain dihedral angles to minimize the nonbonded energy, hydrogen-bonded energy, and rotational energy contributions. In the final stage of refin...
Differences in subunit composition and iron content of isoferritins.
The Journal of biological chemistry    July 25, 1975   Volume 250, Issue 14 5446-5449 
Ishitani K, Listowsky I.Horse spleen ferritin was fractionated into its constituent isoferritins by isoelectric focusing. Separated isoferritins were stable and showed no tendency to redistribute when re-examined by analytical gel focusing. All of the isoferritins were immunologically indistinguishable when tested with antibodies raised against unfractionated horse spleen ferritin. The separated isoferritins also had similar conformations as determined by circular dichroism. Iron distribution studies, however, revealed a wide disparity among the isoferritins. The most acidic components had the lowest iron content but...
ATPase activity and filament formation of partially purified myosin from leucocytes.
Journal of biochemistry    July 1, 1975   Volume 78, Issue 1 93-103 
Takeuchi K, Shibata N, Senda N.Myosin was isolated from leucocytes in horse arterial blood by the same procedures used for the isolation of myosin from skeletal muscle. The Ca2+-, EDTA-, and Mg2+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] activities of the protein was 0.148, 0.147, and 0.001 mumoles/min/mg, respectively, in 0.5 M KCl at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees. The Ca2+-ATPase activity decreased with decrease in the ionic strength. No difference was found between leucocyte myosin and skeletal myosin in the pH profiles of Ca2+- and EDTA-ATPases. The rate and amount of the initial burst of Pi liberation of leucocyte myosin were 0.002 mumoles/min/mg a...
The cells of equine blood and their development.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 3 141-147 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1975.tb03253.x
Tschudi P, Archer RK, Gerber H.Based on morphologie studies on bone marrow, lymphnode and blood preparations the cells of equine blood and their developmental stages are described and illustrated with 32 coloured photographs.
The influence of exercise on serum enzyme levels in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1975   Volume 7, Issue 3 160-165 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1975.tb03258.x
Anderson MG.A group of clinically normal horses was subjected to controlled strenuous exercise. Elevated serum concentrations of lactic dehydrogenase, aldolase and creatine kinase were observed after exercise but no significant change in serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase was noted. These changes were reduced by repeated exposure to exercise suggesting that measurement of serum enzyme elevations, particularly creatine kinase, might be a useful index of fitness in the horse. Administration of prednisolone prior to exercise also reduced these changes. Since the serum enzyme concentrations had returned t...
Structure of horse-spleen apoferritin at 6 angstom resolution.
Nature    June 19, 1975   Volume 255, Issue 5510 653-654 doi: 10.1038/255653a0
Hoare RJ, Harrison PM, Hoy TG.No abstract available
Constituents of ceramide monohexoside isolated from equine kidney.
The Japanese journal of experimental medicine    June 1, 1975   Volume 45, Issue 3 231-234 
Kojima H, Tamai Y.No abstract available
Biochemistry, cytology, and microbiology of equine peritoneal fluid after experimental strangulation obstruction of the distal ileum.
The American journal of digestive diseases    June 1, 1975   Volume 20, Issue 6 595 
Hamiliton DP, Hardenbrook HJ.No abstract available
Carboxymethyl horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase. Ligand-binding and kinetic properties of the cysteine-46-modified enzyme.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    May 1, 1975   Volume 168, Issue 1 145-162 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(75)90237-4
Reynolds CH, McKinley-McKee JS.No abstract available
Identification of O-cetylated N-acylneuraminic acids by mass spectrometry.
Carbohydrate research    May 1, 1975   Volume 41 7-17 doi: 10.1016/s0008-6215(00)87002-0
Kamerling JP, Vliegenthart JF.A number of O-acetylated N-acylneuraminic acids, isolated from submandibular glands of cow and horse and from horse erythrocytes, have been characterized by mass spectrometry. On the basis of the typical fragmentation patterns of the pertrimethylsilyl derivatives of the methyl esters of the compounds, they were identified as 4-O-acetyl-, 9-O-acetyl-, 4,9-di-O-acetyl-, and 7,9-di-O-acetyl N-acetylneuraminic acid, and 4-O-acetyl-and 9-O-acetyl-N-glycolylneuraminic acid.
Manganese-substituted hemoglobin and myoglobin.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    April 15, 1975   Volume 244 174-186 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1975.tb41530.x
Hoffman BM, Gibson QH, Bull C, Crepeau RH, Edelstein SJ, Fisher RG, McDonald MJ.No abstract available
The different activities of arginase, arginine synthetase, ornithine transcarbamoylase and delta-ornithine transaminase in the liver and blood cells of some farm animals.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    April 15, 1975   Volume 50, Issue 4 555-558 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(75)90088-7
Owczarczyk B, Barej W.No abstract available
Species variability in the modification of erythrocyte surface proteins by enzymatic probes.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    March 13, 1975   Volume 382, Issue 2 181-192 doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(75)90176-5
Carraway KL, Colton DG, Shin BC, Triplett RB.Bovine and equine erythrocytes have been studied by three different surface modification techniques to investigate the accessibility of the surface components to the external medium. Lactoperoxidase labeling of equine erythrocytes results in a significant labeling of only one membrane component, a 100 000-mol.wt polypeptide corresponding to the membrane-spanning Component III of human erythrocytes. The major sialoglycoprotein of the equine erythrocyte is not labeled. This is in contradistinction to the situation for human and bovine cells, where both components are labeled. The equine membrane...
The effect of isoprenaline on 86-Rb uptake by horse lymphocytes in vitro.
British journal of pharmacology    March 1, 1975   Volume 53, Issue 3 448P-449P 
Trist DG, Weatherall M.The research studies the effect of a drug called isoprenaline on the intake of a radioactive isotope, 86-Rb, in horse lymphocytes. It finds that isoprenaline has a significant effect increasing […]
Histological development of the thymic and intestinal lymphoid tissue of the horse.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    March 1, 1975   Volume 46, Issue 1 47-55 
Mackenzie CD.The basic components of the immune system, and the defence mechanisms in the gastrointestinal tract, are briefly reviewed. Histological studies in 84 equine foetuses showed that lymphoid cells begin populating the thymic primordium at 11-12 weeks, the mesenteric lymph nodes at 13 weeks, the spleen at 25 weeks and the intestinal lamina propria at 13-14 weeks' gestation. Lymphocytes were seen in the intestinal epithelium very early in gestation. Histological signs of response to antigenic stimulation were seen in five foetuses, indicating that the horse is likely to be capable of mounting an imm...
Surface receptors on neutrophils and monocytes from immunodeficient and normal horses.
Immunology    March 1, 1975   Volume 28, Issue 3 581-588 
Banks KL, McGuire TC.Surface receptors on peripheral blood neutrophils and monocytes from normal and immunodeficient horses have been studied. Sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) coated with IgG, IgM, and complement but not IgG(T), readily bound to normal equine monocytes and neutrophils. More than 4000 molecules of IgG were required to sensitize each SRBC for adherence to monocytes, and more than 12,000 molecules were required for adherence to neutrophils. Young horses with a severe combined immunodeficiency had an almost total absence of lymphocytes, but normal numbers of monocytes and neutrophils. The number of receptors...
Transformation of horse skin cells by type-C sarcoma viruses.
International journal of cancer    February 15, 1975   Volume 15, Issue 2 171-179 doi: 10.1002/ijc.2910150202
Rhim JS, Ro HS, Kim EB, Gilden RV, Huebner RJ.A horse skin cell line (E. Derm, NBL-6, CCL-57) was susceptible to focus formation by the Kirsten mouse sarcoma virus, feline sarcoma virus (ST stain) and the MSV pseudotypes with woolly monkey, gibbon monkey, RD-114, AT-124, baboon placenta and murine xenotropic (BALB/c 3T3 and C57L/JD) type-C viruses. Foci were detected within 5 days after infection and the transformed cells continued to produce infectious virus and group-specific antigen of their respective type-C leukemia viruses. The transformation efficiency of various type-C sarcoma viruses in horse cells was also very high.
Rapid diagnosis of Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis by fluorescence microscopy.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 2 167-170 
Erickson GA, Maré CJ.Goat Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis (VEE) antiserum and normal serum were conjugated and evaluated for staining sensitivity and specificity. Cross-staining with either eastern or western equine encephalomyelitis virus-infected cells did not occur. The baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) cell line when combined with highly specific VEE conjugate detected 100 medium suckling mouse intracerebral lethal doses (suckling mouse LD-50/IC) of the 1B subtype of VEE virus per milliliter of equine tissue suspension. Conjugated goat antiserum was assayed for sensitivity for detection of VEE virus-infected eq...
Binding of Au(CN)2- and Pt(CN)4-2- to horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. A 35C1NMR relaxation study.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    January 23, 1975   Volume 377, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1016/0005-2744(75)90279-x
Bull TE, Lindman B, Einarsson R, Zeppezauer M.The binding of Au(CN)2- and Pt(CN)4-2- ions to the coenzyme binding site of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (alcohol : NAD+ oxidoreductase EC 1.1.1.1) has been studied by 35C1 nuclear magnetic relaxation. Longitudinal relaxation rates were analyzed in terms of a simple model and binding constants for Au(CN)2-, Pt(CN)4-2- and C1- were estimated. From a comparison between transverse and longitudinal relaxation rates the correlation time and the quadrupole coupling constant of bound chloride ion were obtained. The quadrupole coupling constant estimated from a simple electrostatic model for chlo...
The multiple forms of acid phosphatase from horse leucocytes.
Bulletin de l'Academie polonaise des sciences. Serie des sciences biologiques    January 1, 1975   Volume 23, Issue 3 153-159 
Wasyl Z.No abstract available
[Systemic cutaneous and subcutaneous amyloidosis in the horse].
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1975   Volume 12, Issue 5-6 405-414 doi: 10.1177/0300985875012005-00607
Stünzi H, Ehrensperger F, Wild P, Leemann W.A 9-year-old horse had numerous firm, painless nodules of the skin and subcutis. Moderately vascular granulation tissue with numerous uni- or multinuclear reticuloendothelial cells was in the nodules and the regional lymph nodes but not in the viscera. By using special stains and electron microscopy, widespread amyloid deposits, mainly in the cytoplasm of reticuloendothelial cells, were identified. Amyloid was probably produced within the reticuloendothelial cells, then expelled from the dying cell and deposited in the intercellular space.