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Topic:Chemokines

Chemokines are a family of small cytokines or signaling proteins secreted by cells that play a key role in the immune system of horses. They are involved in the chemotaxis, or directed movement, of immune cells towards sites of inflammation, infection, or injury. Chemokines facilitate communication between cells and help coordinate the body's response to various pathological conditions. In horses, chemokines are studied for their involvement in inflammatory processes and their potential as biomarkers for disease detection and progression. This page provides a collection of peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the function, regulation, and clinical relevance of chemokines in equine health.
Borna disease: virus-induced neurobehavioral disease pathogenesis.
Current opinion in microbiology    August 10, 2001   Volume 4, Issue 4 467-475 doi: 10.1016/s1369-5274(00)00237-x
Carbone KM, Rubin SA, Nishino Y, Pletnikov MV.Studies of the pathogenesis of neurobehavioral diseases following Borna disease virus infections have been increasing rapidly over the past ten years. Recent major advances have included a report of vertical transmission of the virus in its natural host, the horse, and a report of isolation of a novel variant, No/98, in that same species. In rats infected neonatally with the Borna disease virus that lack blood-borne inflammation in the brain, evidence of an "endogenous" brain inflammatory response is abundant, with elevated expression of cytokine and chemokine mRNA. Infection in these rats is ...
Molecules and mediators of inflammation in equine heaves: mechanisms and markers of disease.
Equine veterinary journal    March 27, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 2 113-115 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2001.tb00587.x
Brazil TJ, McGorum BC.No abstract available
Interleukin-8 concentration and neutrophil chemotactic activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease following exposure to hay.
American journal of veterinary research    December 7, 2000   Volume 61, Issue 11 1369-1374 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2000.61.1369
Franchini M, Gill U, von Fellenberg R, Bracher VD.To analyze effects of hay dust exposure on interleukin-8 (IL-8) concentration, percentage of neutrophils, and neutrophil chemotactic activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: 16 healthy horses and 29 horses with COPD. Methods: IL-8 concentration, percentage of neutrophils, and neutrophil chemotactic activity in BALF were measured. Values were analyzed with respect to hay dust exposure. These variables were also measured in 5 asymptomatic horses with COPD after the induction of clinical signs by changing feed from silag...
Cloning of equine chemokines eotaxin, monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1, MCP-2 and MCP-4, mRNA expression in tissues and induction by IL-4 in dermal fibroblasts.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 25, 2000   Volume 76, Issue 3-4 283-298 doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(00)00222-1
Benarafa C, Cunningham FM, Hamblin AS, Horohov DW, Collins ME.We report the cloning of four equine CC chemokines, eotaxin, monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1, MCP-2 and MCP-4, which show high levels of identity with their respective homologous sequences in other species. Using a multiplex RT-PCR, we have studied the constitutive mRNA expression of these four CC chemokines in skin, lung, liver, spleen, jejunum, colon and kidney of normal adult horses and compared this data with the eosinophil counts in the same samples. We demonstrate that eotaxin mRNA is only expressed in jejunum and colon, where there are large numbers of eosinophils suggesting th...
Hypersensitivity disorders in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 7, 2000   Volume 16, Issue 1 131-vii doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30123-2
Swiderski CE.Hypersensitivity is an exaggerated immunologic response to a foreign agent that results in inflammation and organ dysfunction. Hypersensitivity disorders are broadly divided into antibody-mediated and T-cell-mediated reactions. The inflammatory pathways that result in disease are initiated in an antigen-specific manner through Fab portions of antibodies or the T-cell receptor, causing the up-regulation of effector mechanisms designed to clear the offending agent. Effector mechanisms include the generation of inflammatory chemicals such as cytokines and chemokines and the attraction of leukocyt...
The role of seminal plasma in post-breeding uterine inflammation.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 2000   Issue 56 341-349 
Troedsson MH, Lee CS, Franklin RD, Crabo BG.The effect of seminal plasma on polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) chemotaxis, PMN phagocytosis and complement-induced cytolysis was determined using blood plasma pooled from four horses and seminal plasma pooled from two stallions. To investigate chemotaxis, complement in blood plasma was activated with E. coli lipopolysaccharide in the presence of 0-50% seminal plasma diluted with a standardized volume of McCoy's medium and placed in a chemotactic chamber. Chemotaxis of blood derived equine PMNs toward the chemoattractants was determined after incubation at 37 degrees C for 45 min. To invest...
The equine herpesvirus 2 E1 open reading frame encodes a functional chemokine receptor.
Journal of virology    November 13, 1999   Volume 73, Issue 12 9843-9848 doi: 10.1128/JVI.73.12.9843-9848.1999
Camarda G, Spinetti G, Bernardini G, Mair C, Davis-Poynter N, Capogrossi MC, Napolitano M.Several herpesviruses contain open reading frames (ORFs) that encode potential homologs of eucaryotic genes. Equine herpesvirus 2 (EHV-2) is a gammaherpesvirus related to other lymphotropic herpesviruses such as herpesvirus saimiri and Epstein-Barr virus. The E1 ORF of EHV-2, a G protein-coupled receptor homolog, shows 31 to 47% amino acid identity with known CC chemokine receptors. To investigate whether E1 may encode a functional receptor, we cloned the E1 ORF and expressed it in stably transfected cell lines. We report here the identification of the CC chemokine eotaxin as a functional liga...
Failure of lipopolysaccharides to directly trigger the chemiluminescence response of isolated equine polymorphonuclear leukocytes.
Veterinary research communications    November 5, 1997   Volume 21, Issue 7 477-482 doi: 10.1023/a:1005938319482
Benbarek H, Deby-Dupont G, Caudron I, Deby C, Lamy M, Serteyn D.Divergent results have been reported on the effects of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) on the activation of equine polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). We therefore attempted to determine whether LPS alone can stimulate equine PMN or whether plasma factors are necessary. PMN were isolated from citrated blood on a discontinuous density gradient of Percoll. The luminol (10(-3) mol/L)-enhanced chemiluminescence (CL) of 1.25 x 10(6) cells was measured after addition of Escherichia coli LPS (0.001-10 micrograms/ml) alone or after incubation in autologous plasma (1 h, 37 degrees C). After direct stimulatio...
Experimental model for the study by chemiluminescence of the activation of isolated equine leucocytes.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1996   Volume 61, Issue 1 59-64 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(96)90112-5
Benbarek H, Deby-Dupont G, Deby C, Caudron I, Mathy-Hartert M, Lamy M, Serteyn D.The activation of human polymorphonuclear leucocytes (the respiratory burst) can be studied by measuring their chemiluminescent response. This technique was adapted to equine leucocytes to investigate the effects of cell number, activator concentration, enhancers of chemiluminescence, pH, temperature and inhibitors. Leucocytes were isolated from citrated blood from healthy horses and chemiluminescence was measured with a Bio-Orbit luminometer sensitive to 900 nm light. The optimal cell density for the maximal chemiluminescent response ranged from 10(6) to 10(7) leucocytes 600 microliters-1. Ch...
The DNA sequence of equine herpesvirus 2.
Journal of molecular biology    June 9, 1995   Volume 249, Issue 3 520-528 doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1995.0314
Telford EA, Watson MS, Aird HC, Perry J, Davison AJ.The complete DNA sequence of equine herpesvirus 2 (EHV-2) strain 86/67 was determined. The genome is 184,427 bp in size and has a base composition of 57.5% G + C. Unusually for a herpesvirus, about a third of the sequence distributed in several large blocks appears not to encode proteins. The 79 open reading frames that were identified as probably polypeptide-coding are predicted to encode 77 distinct proteins. Amino acid sequence comparisons confirmed that EHV-2 is a gamma-herpesvirus that is genetically collinear with herpesvirus saimiri (HVS; a gamma 2-herpesvirus) and Epstein-Barr virus (E...
Generation and partial characterization of an eosinophil chemotactic cytokine produced by sensitized equine mononuclear cells stimulated with Strongylus vulgaris antigen.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1993   Volume 37, Issue 2 135-149 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(93)90061-8
Dennis VA, Klei TR, Chapman MR.Supernatants generated by stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from Strongylus vulgaris sensitized or immunized ponies were assayed in vitro for eosinophil chemotactic activity (ECA) using the filter system in blind well chambers. The supernatants from these cultures were chemotactic for eosinophils, but not for neutrophils. Supernates from cultures of unsensitized PBMC stimulated with S. vulgaris antigen were not chemotactic for eosinophils. ECA was first detected in culture supernatants after 1.5 h of incubation and was dependent on both antigen and PBMC concentrations, b...
Neutrophil chemotaxis in the horse is not mediated by a complex of equine neutrophil elastase and equine alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor.
The British veterinary journal    July 1, 1993   Volume 149, Issue 4 331-338 doi: 10.1016/S0007-1935(05)80074-0
Scudamore CL, Pemberton A, Watson ED, Miller HR.Studies have demonstrated that as a result of proteolytic inactivation or complex formation (with neutrophil elastase), human alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor (API) becomes a potent chemoattractant for human neutrophils. The present study aimed to investigate the in vitro chemotactic response of equine neutrophils to an equivalent complex of equine API and neutrophil elastase. No evidence of neutrophil migration was observed towards purified complex derived from equine neutrophil elastase and the Spi 1 isoform of equine API, or to crude mixtures of porcine pancreatic elastase and unseparated equin...
Neutrophil migration induced by equine respiratory secretions, bronchoalveolar lavage fluids and culture supernatants of pulmonary lavage cells.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    September 1, 1991   Volume 29, Issue 3-4 313-328 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(91)90022-5
Grünig G, Witschi U, Winder C, Hermann M, von Fellenberg R.Supernatants of equine respiratory secretions enhanced the migration of equine neutrophils into the lower compartments of Boyden chambers. Checkerboard analysis revealed that the neutrophil migration promoting activity (NMPA) of secretion specimens was in great part caused by chemokinesis, irrespective of the neutrophil score of the specimen. The NMPA of respiratory secretions was correlated neither with the neutrophil score of the secretion specimen nor with the severity of the chronic pulmonary disease. Respiratory secretions collected while horses were kept under low dust or under dusty hou...
Detection of chemotactic factors in preovulatory follicular fluid from mares.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 9 1412-1415 
Watson ED, Sertich PL, Zanecosky HG.Ovulation has been likened to an inflammatory process. Inflammatory cells accumulate in the ovulating follicle, presumably because of chemotactic factors. Chemotactic activity was measured in fluid aspirated from follicles of estrous mares 0, 12, 24, and 36 hours after ultrasonographic detection of a 35-mm follicle and IV treatment with 2,500 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin. Chemotaxis was assessed by measuring directional migration of equine neutrophils under agarose. Follicular fluid acted as a chemoattractant for neutrophils, but there was no significant difference in chemotactic activit...
Influence of technical parameters on the in vitro motility of equine neutrophils in the presence of streptococcal culture supernatant.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    November 30, 1989   Volume 23, Issue 1-2 85-101 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(89)90112-8
Blancquaert AB, Colgan SP, Bruyninckx WJ.To identify the influence of technical factors on the in vitro motility of equine neutrophils towards streptococcus culture supernatant in an under-agarose assay, we studied the changes in eight cell migration parameters. The distances the phagocytes travelled by directed, random and spontaneous migration increased with incubation time, cell concentration and the gelatin and serum contents of the migration plates. The contribution of chemotaxis to the phagocyte migrations, however, decreased simultaneously. The directed and random, though not the spontaneous, migrations of the phagocytes incre...
The lipoxygenase pathway and chemiluminescence in horse eosinophilic leukocytes.
Journal of bioluminescence and chemiluminescence    July 1, 1989   Volume 4, Issue 1 272-278 doi: 10.1002/bio.1170040139
Müller T, Chavaillaz PA, Jörg A, Grob M, Peterhans E.It was shown in several cell types that the dual lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase inhibitor eicosatetraynoic acid but not the cyclooxygenase inhibitor acetylsalicylic acid suppressed luminol-dependent chemiluminescence. Since lipoxygenase is known to generate chemiluminescence in vitro, these observations were interpreted as evidence for a direct contribution of the lipoxygenase pathway to light emission in intact cells. We have investigated a possible contribution of the lipoxygenase to the chemiluminescence of horse eosinophils by directly comparing the formation of the byproduct chemilumines...
[The early chemotactic reaction of the equine uterus to acute inflammatory stimulation].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Supplement    January 1, 1989   Volume 4 17-20 
Pycock JF, Allen WE.The uteri of normal pony mares in oestrus were infected experimentally with Streptococcus zooepidemicus. Uterine contents were collected 30, 60, 120 or 240 minutes later and were tested for their chemotactic effect on equine-neutrophils both with a morphological assay based on neutrophil shape changes and with a modified Boyden chamber technique. By 30 minutes after infection the uterine contents were markedly chemotactic for isolated peripheral neutrophils and remained so at the 240-minute collection. Uterine contents from uninfected mares had minimal chemotactic properties. These results cou...
Chemotactic and chemokinetic activity of Streptococcus faecalis culture supernatant for equine neutrophils.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 1, 1988   Volume 19, Issue 3-4 285-297 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(88)90115-8
Blancquaert AM, Colgan SP, Bruyninckx WJ.Although equine neutrophils did not respond towards formylated methionyl peptides, Streptococcus faecalis culture supernatant caused an in vitro stimulation of equine neutrophil motility when measured by an under-agarose assay. The migration of neutrophils towards the culture supernatant increased sigmoidally with the logarithmic concentration of the culture supernatant in the chemoattractant wells. The streptococcal culture supernatant was chemokinetic because it stimulated the random motility of the phagocytes. Because granulocytes migrated further towards the supernatant than could be expla...
Effect of ovarian steroids on migration of uterine lumenal neutrophils and on chemokinetic factors in uterine secretions from mares.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 5 368-370 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01547.x
Watson ED.Incubation of blood neutrophils with uterine flushings collected from ovariectomised mares treated with oestradiol, stimulated migration under agarose, whereas flushings from mares treated with progesterone or oily vehicle, inhibited migration. After intra-uterine infusion of bacteria, however, flushings from oestradiol-treated and vehicle-treated mares inhibited migration, whereas progesterone treatment stimulated migration. Migration of uterine-derived neutrophils under agarose was less than that of blood neutrophils and was not influenced by treatment with ovarian steroids. Uterine suscepti...
Chemotactic response of equine polymorphonuclear leucocytes to Streptococcus equi.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1988   Volume 45, Issue 2 225-229 
Muhktar MM, Timoney JF.Streptococcus equi infection in horses is characterised by intense infiltration of lymph nodes by polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNs) suggesting a potent chemotactic response to the organism or its products. Equine PMNs were separated using Ficoll-Hypaque medium and used in an assay of chemotaxis under agarose to study the components of S equi involved in this response. Results showed that complement-derived chemotactic factors generated by activation of the alternative complement pathway were important in chemotactic responses to S equi. Both whole bacteria and peptidoglycan preparations were...
Influence of arachidonic acid metabolites in vitro and in uterine washings on migration of equine neutrophils under agarose.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1987   Volume 43, Issue 2 203-207 
Watson ED, Stokes CR, Bourne FJ.The influence of arachidonic acid metabolites on migration of equine neutrophils under agarose was investigated. Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) was chemotactic at concentrations between 0.1 and 1000 ng ml-1 and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) at 1 and 10 ng ml-1 but not at higher or lower concentrations. Prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) was not chemotactic for equine neutrophils at any concentration. Random migration was significantly inhibited (P less than 0.05) by suspension of neutrophils in LTB4 (0.1 to 1000 ng ml-1) and PGF2 alpha (0.1 ng ml-1) but not at high concentrations. There was a significant po...
Influence of chemotactic agents on the locomotion of equine polymorphonuclear and mononuclear leucocytes.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1987   Volume 43, Issue 1 55-58 
Sedgwick AD, Dawson J, Lees P.Subpopulations of equine leucocytes, polymorphonuclear and mononuclear cells, were separated from whole blood on a discontinuous Percoll gradient and used in studies of chemokinesis and chemotaxis. Polymorphonuclear cells responded to the chemo-attractant properties of zymosan-activated plasma in Boyden chamber and agarose microdroplet assays but they responded only slightly (Boyden chamber) or not at all (agarose microdroplet) to the peptide N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP). Equine mononuclear cell movement was increased by FMLP in both assay systems and these cells also respond...
Cellular aspects of inflammation. The Ciba-Geigy Prize for Research in Animal Health.
The Veterinary record    May 30, 1987   Volume 120, Issue 22 529-536 doi: 10.1136/vr.120.22.529
Sedgwick AD, Lees P, Dawson J, May SA.The migration of leucocytes to sites of acute and chronic inflammation is an event of central importance to the maintenance of inflammatory processes; extravascular leucocytes are responsible for generating chemical mediators of inflammation and the phagocytosis of particulate matter. They may also be involved in the conversion of acute to chronic inflammatory lesions. Leucocytes are attracted to sites of tissue injury by a range of chemoattractants. This paper describes the development of a method for separating on Percoll gradients purified populations of equine polymorphonuclear and mononuc...
Inhibition of equine neutrophil chemotaxis and chemokinesis by a Taenia taeniaeformis proteinase inhibitor, taeniaestatin.
Parasite immunology    March 1, 1987   Volume 9, Issue 2 195-204 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3024.1987.tb00500.x
Leid RW, Grant RF, Suquet CM.Taeniaestatin, a recently isolated Taenia taeniaeformis proteinase inhibitor, was used to inhibit equine neutrophil migration. Taeniaestatin itself was not chemotactic when used as a chemotactic factor but taeniaestatin did inhibit neutrophil chemokinesis when tested in a Zigmond-Hirsch checkerboard assay. A dose-dependent inhibition of both chemokinesis and chemotaxis was observed when zymosan activated bovine sera (ZABS) was used as the chemotactic factor. This inhibition was greater than 95% when 5 mu of taeniaestatin was present on both the cell and chemotactic factor side of the chambers....
Chemotactic and phagocytic function of peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leucocytes in newborn foals.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 599-605 
Bernoco M, Liu IK, Wuest-Ehlert CJ, Miller ME, Bowers J.Chemotactic and phagocytic responsiveness of peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs) from 11 foals were analysed immediately after birth (pre-colostral) and at different times after colostrum ingestion. The number of foal PMNLs per microscopic field that had migrated through the filter in chemotaxis and the number of yeast particles ingested per foal PMNL in phagocytosis were significantly lower when tested with foal plasma before colostrum ingestion (chemotaxis, 2.0 +/- 0.55 (s.e.m.); phagocytosis, 0.98 +/- 0.352) than in tests 4 or more days after colostrum ingestion (chemotaxi...
Stimulation of equine eosinophil migration by hydroxyacid metabolites of arachidonic acid.
The American journal of pathology    November 1, 1985   Volume 121, Issue 2 361-368 
Potter KA, Leid RW, Kolattukudy PE, Espelie KE.Lipoxygenase products of arachidonic acid are important mediators of inflammation, affecting several aspects of cell function. Monohydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (mono-HETE) and 5,12-dihydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (LTB4) enhance migration of both neutrophils and eosinophils in several species. The relative ability of positional isomers of HETE and of LTB4 to affect migration of equine eosinophils was studied. The 5, 8, 9, 11, 12, and 15 isomers of HETE were prepared by autooxidation of arachidonic acid, separated by sequential normal phase and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography...
Comparison of peripheral blood and uterine-derived polymorphonuclear leukocytes from mares resistant and susceptible to chronic endometritis: chemotactic and cell elastimetry analysis.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 4 917-920 
Liu IK, Cheung AT, Walsh EM, Miller ME, Lindenberg PM.The functional competence of peripheral blood and uterine-derived polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) from 12 mares were analyzed for chemotactic responsiveness using a chemotactic chamber (filter) assay and for deformability by cell elastimetry analysis. Peripheral blood PMN obtained from control mares and from 8 mares experimentally inoculated via the uterus with 1 x 10(9) Streptococcus zooepidemicus had similar normal chemotactic responsiveness and were highly deformable before and at 12 hours after inoculation. Uterine PMN obtained 12 hours after uterine inoculation with S zooepidemicus fro...
Chemotactic properties and protein of equine uterine fluid.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 6 1205-1208 
Blue HB, Blue MG, Kenney RM, Merritt TL.Forty uterine fluid samples were obtained from 4 mares classified as resistant to uterine bacterial infection. The uterus of each mare was flushed with 50 ml of saline solution during estrus and diestrus of successive estrous cycles. Bacteria or fungi were isolated from 4 samples, and 7 additional samples were obtained from a mare with active intrauterine infection. Fluid volumes obtained during estrus (means = 40.3 +/- 11 ml) tended to be greater than those recovered during diestrus (means = 36.8 +/- 7.9 ml), but the difference was not significant. Concentrations and yields of protein in reco...
Isolation of equine neutrophils and analysis of functional characteristics by chemiluminescence and bacterial assays.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 11 1912-1916 
Jacobsen K, Gintz T, Reed SM, Newbry J, Bayly WM, Perryman LE, Leid RW.Equine neutrophils (PMN) were isolated to greater than 99% purity by isopyknic sedimentation on coated colloidal silica particles. A cell recovery of 84.7 +/- 4.0%, with a viability of greater than 99%, was observed with this method. The isolated PMN were compared with mixed population of equine peripheral leukocytes with respect to functional integrity by chemiluminescence and bactericidal assays. There was no significant difference (P less than 0.01) observed in either assay between the isolated equine PMN and the mixed-cell populations. The methods used in both the isolation as well as the ...
Characterization of the chemiluminescence response of equine phagocytes.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 7 1147-1151 
Washburn SM, Klesius PH, Ganjam VK.No abstract available