Topic:Developmental Biology
Developmental biology in horses involves the study of the processes by which horses grow and develop from a single fertilized egg into a fully formed organism. This field encompasses various stages, including embryonic development, fetal growth, and postnatal maturation. Researchers in this area examine cellular differentiation, gene expression, and morphogenetic movements that contribute to the formation of tissues and organs in equine species. Key topics include the molecular mechanisms that regulate developmental pathways, the influence of genetic and environmental factors on development, and the identification of developmental disorders. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the fundamental aspects of equine developmental biology, offering insights into the mechanisms driving normal and abnormal development in horses.
Closure of the abdominal wall at the umbilicus and the development of umbilical hernias in a group of foals from birth to 11 months of age. The closure of the body wall defect at the umbilicus was studied in relation to the development of umbilical hernias in a group of 44 normal foals, 25 of which were followed from birth until five months of age, and 19 from birth until 11 months of age. At birth, 19 of the foals had a defect in the body wall at the umbilicus that was termed a 'palpable umbilical ring'. In 18 of them this defect disappeared within four days, but in the other the ring did not close and a hernial sac with abdominal contents was palpable. This foal was considered to be the only foal to have a truly congenital umbil...
Scanning electron microscopy of the microcotyledonary placenta of the horse (Equus caballus) in the latter half of gestation. Scanning electron microscopy was used to examine the microstructure of the maternal and fetal placenta from 25 pregnant ponies (Equus caballus) throughout the second half of gestation. Samples of placenta, 2-6 cm(2)in area, were collected from the antimesometrial region of the pregnant horn at 105 days (n=1), 165-219 days (n=5), 260 days (n=3), 270-277 days (n=3), 313-337 days (n=11) and immediately after spontaneous delivery at term (n=2). The maternal microcaruncle appears to be created from a clustering of about 16 uterine crypts encapsulated in a connective tissue sheath. There is a gestat...
A unique exocelom-like space during early pregnancy in the horse. The free allantois and allantochorion of conceptuses from 17 mares between 20 and 90 days of gestation were examined to determine the manner in which the associated mesodermal derivatives differentiated. It was found that a robust basement membrane developed under the allantoic endoderm, and that this basement membrane was partially isolated from the vascular layer of the allantois by a mesothelial layer and an exocelom-like space. The exocelom-like space persisted until approximately the stage of villous formation, and remnants of the space persisted over larger allantoic vessels even later. ...
Glycosylation in the near-term epitheliochorial placenta of the horse, donkey and camel: a comparative study of interbreeding and non-interbreeding species. Studies from this laboratory have shown great diversity in the glycosylation of tissues comprising the interhaemal barrier of species with different placental types. This diversity may be one of the factors preventing interbreeding between species. Glycan expression within the uterine epithelium and trophoblast of the interhaemal barrier was examined to test this proposition in three species with similar diffuse, microcotyledonary, epitheliochorial allantochorionic types of placenta: the horse (Equus caballus) and donkey (Equus asinus), which can interbreed with each other, and the camel (Came...
Comparative aspects of equine embryonic development. The developmental changes in the equine conceptus, its maternal environment and their interaction during the first 4 weeks following fertilization are reviewed. Attention is drawn to species-specific events to show why the horse is such a valuable model in which to study early pregnancy.
The early fetal life of the equine conceptus. This paper will discuss development of the equine conceptus, especially from the perspective of the maternal environment in which it develops and to which it has considerable influence.
The teeth of the horse: evolution and anatomo-morphological and radiographic study of their development in the foetus. The aim of this work was to study the ontogenetic process in teeth from their early appearance in the ossifying matrix of the mandible and maxilla, in different foetuses of scalar ages. Radiographic examinations of the skull and mandible hemisections were performed and the latero-medial (LM) and dorsoventral (DV) projections for the skull and mandible were analysed. A high-definition film-screen combination was used for this study. The exposure values ranged from 35 kV/6 mAs to 58 kV/10 mAs, according to the size of the skulls and their degree of ossification. The first dental germ observed wa...
Cell proliferation patterns during development of the equine placenta. Placentation involves considerable growth and reorganization of both maternal and fetal tissues. In this investigation, immunohistochemical localization of the proliferation marker Ki-67 antigen was used to monitor cell division during placentation in mares. Endometrial biopsies were obtained from eight mares between day 14 and day 26 of pregnancy and from eight anoestrous mares that had been treated with various combinations of progesterone and oestrogen. Samples of endometrium and fetal membranes were obtained from 19 mares carrying normal horse conceptuses between day 30 and day 250 of gest...
Differential gene expression in day 12 and day 15 equine conceptuses. Complex changes in gene expression must occur at the proper time and in the appropriate tissues for pregnancy to be successful. Therefore, research aimed at defining the regulation of gene expression in conceptuses is of critical importance. However, information on developmentally regulated changes in gene expression in horse conceptuses is sparse and inadequate. In the present study, suppression subtractive hybridization was used to identify genes that are expressed more highly at day 15 than on day 12 of gestation. This period encompasses maternal recognition of pregnancy and the beginning o...
Quantitative histological analysis of equine embryos at exactly 156 and 168 h after ovulation. Equine embryos were collected at exactly 156 +/- 0.5 (n=8) and 168 +/- 0.5 h (n=11) after ovulation. The embryos were fixed in glutaraldehyde, sectioned serially and observed using light microscopy. In the 156 h group, all embryos were early blastocysts except for one, which was a morula. The morula and one early blastocyst had no capsule. The capsules of the other embryos were thin. The mean +/- SD total number of cells was 275 +/- 105 (range 117-417). The mean +/- SD proportions of mitotic and pycnotic cells were 2.5 +/- 1.2 and 1.1 +/- 1.8%, respectively, and there were no differences betwe...
Development of equine endometrial glands from fetal life to ovarian cyclicity. Branched tubular endometrial glands are key features of the uterine lining in mares. The epithelium in the neck regions of the glands is similar to that lining the lumen of the uterus, whereas the epithelium in the deeper, coiled portions of the glands secretes protein rich histotrophe or 'uterine milk' during dioestrus and pregnancy. The present study was performed to characterize endometrial histology in perinatal and peripubertal fillies and to investigate the influences of specific steroid treatments on endometrial gland development in the prepubertal period. Uteri obtained from equine fet...
Maternal influence on pre- and postnatal growth of foals born after embryo transfer. In the present study the growth and development of three pairs of matching gender foals from birth to maturity were compared. One Polish Pony embryo of each pair was transferred from a donor mare (mass 387-400 kg) to a much larger heavy type recipient mare (mass 561-780 kg). The other embryo of each pair underwent normal gestation (control). The transferred and control horses were examined at 9 and 13 years of age, and X-ray pictures were taken of their front legs to measure the length of the bones. On the basis of the results of this study, it is concluded that the processes of growth and dev...
Developmental changes in blood pressure and the renin-angiotensin system in pony fetuses during the second half of gestation. Blood pressure, heart rate and the plasma concentrations of cortisol and components of the renin-angiotensin system were measured in chronically catheterized Pony mares (n=15) and their fetuses during the second half of gestation (day 153-336 of gestation; term is normally between day 320 and day 340 of gestation). Fetal blood pressure increased towards term with the prepartum surge in plasma cortisol concentration, and there was a correlation between fetal blood pressure and both gestational age (r = 0.88, P < 0.0005) and plasma cortisol concentration (r = 0.88, P < 0.0005). Plasma concentrat...
Morphological study on pigmented cells in the horse testis. One of the most attractive characteristics of a horse testis is the change of the weight during development. As the testicular weight changes and the number of Leydig cells decreases, pigments appear in interstitial tissues. In the present study, the characteristics of the pigments found in the interstitial tissues were examined histochemically and ultrastructurally. Specific stainings indicated that the pigmented granules showed almost all of the histological and histochemical characteristics of ceroid or ceroid-like pigment. The cells showed positive reaction for acid phosphatase while the p...
Transglutaminase activity in equine strongyles and its potential role in growth and development. Transglutaminases (E.C. 2.3.3.13) are a family of Ca(2+)-dependent enzymes that stabilize protein structure by catalyzing the formation of isopeptide bonds. A novel form of transglutaminase has been identified and characterized that seem to play an important role in growth, development, and molting in adult and larval stages of filarial nematodes. The aim of this study was to identify the ubiquitous nature of this enzyme in other nematodes and to measure its significance to larval growth, molting, and development. For this purpose, equine Strongylus spp. were used. Activity of this enzyme was ...
Identification and initial characterization of calcyclin and phospholipase A2 in equine conceptuses. For development to proceed normally, the appropriate genes must be expressed in the correct tissues and in the correct time frame. Knowledge of gene expression during development provides information about the changes taking place within the conceptus as well as possible reasons for pregnancy failure. However, little is known about gene expression during development in the equine conceptus. In this study, we examined differences in gene expression between day 12 and day 15 equine conceptuses by suppression subtractive hybridization. This technique was used to isolate transcripts that are more ...
Equine placental cup cells show glycan expression distinct from that of both chorionic girdle progenitor cells and early allantochorionic trophoblast of the placenta. Using lectin histochemistry on plastic-embedded material, the glycosylation patterns of equine girdle and cup cells, and associated endometrial glands, have been investigated from 37 to 67 days gestation. Results were compared with the glycosylation of the 50-day allantochorionic trophoblast of the established equine placenta that will later form the microcotyledons. The differentiated cup cells, which secrete equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG), showed a pattern of glycosylation that was distinct both from the progenitor girdle cells and the allantochorionic trophoblast, with granules that bo...
[Development of hoof cartilage with special considerations of its ossification]. The pre- and perinatal development of the hoof cartilage is described concerning the histological structure and surrounding vessels. Beginning in the third month of fetal development, the anlage of the hoof cartilage is still present in typical shape and location. It is built out of mesenchymal connective tissue. During further fetal development, the connective tissue cells will differentiate into two cell populations, fibroblasts and chondroblasts. Vessels, traversing the hoof cartilage, are surrounded by loose connective tissue, which will partially develop fibrocartilage. At birth, hoof car...
Identification of a new aspartic proteinase expressed by the outer chorionic cell layer of the equine placenta. The pregnancy-associated glycoproteins (PAGs) are placental antigens that were initially characterized as pregnancy markers in the maternal circulation of domestic ruminant species. They are members of the aspartic proteinase gene family, having greatest sequence identity with pepsinogens. However, some are not capable of functioning as enzymes. The PAGs are associated with a large gene family within the Artiodactyla order (cattle, camels, pigs). So far, no members of this family have been characterized in species outside this order. This report describes the cloning and initial characterizati...
A lectin binding analysis of glycosylation patterns during development of the equine placenta. The glycosylation of the equine interhaemal barrier and areola was studied throughout the period of gestation. Placentae of 35, 37, 50, 119, 152, 200, 280 and 300 days gestation were investigated, using semithin plastic embedded sections and a panel of 15 biotinylated lectins with an avidin-peroxidase revealing system. Glycosylation of the trophoblast and maternal epithelium showed the most change during the first 50 days of gestation, being associated with the initial stages of adhesion and attachment. In the trophoblast, non-bisected tri/tetraantennary complex N-glycan was only evident after...
Fetal development of the white line (Zona alba) of the equine hoof. The fetal development of the white line (Zona alba) in the equine hoof is described. Its specific structure of lamellar and interlamellar horn, which in turn is composed of cap and terminal horn, is formed in the second half of the hoof's fetal development. In equine fetuses with a crown-rump length of less than 550 mm, the hoof capsule lacks a 'characteristic' white line since no borders between stratum medium, stratum internum and sole horn are discernible. In the hoof of an equine fetus with a crown-rump length of 550 mm, a narrow white line has taken shape. Its shallow lamellae are arrange...
[The development of the horse testis]. The aim of the study was to answer the open questions concerning the development of the horse's testis. This study revealed that the seminiferous tubules originate from the sex cords of the coelomic epithelium and Leydig cells from the proximal part of mesonephric nephrons, whereas the rete and the ductuli efferentes derive from intermediate and distal parts of the mesonephric tubules. During the development the Leydig cells undergo an enormous proliferation due to the PMSG secretion in the mare. The proliferation of these cells prevent the deep penetration of the rete into the medulla and is ...
Endocrinology of pregnancy: chorionic somatomammotropins and pregnancy-associated glycoproteins: review. The two main groups of placental proteins of ruminants are discussed in this paper: chorionic somatomammotropins (placental lactogens) and pregnancy-specific (-associated) proteins. Placental lactogens belong to the prolactin and growth hormone family. They stimulate mammogenesis, fetal growth and maternal metabolism. Pregnancy-specific proteins and pregnancy-associated glycoproteins belong to the aspartic proteinase family like pepsin, cathepsin D and E. These two groups of proteins are secreted in the maternal circulation by the binucleate cells after their migration to and fusion with the u...
Distribution of putative primordial germ cells in equine embryos. Eighteen equine embryos, 3 each on Days 20, 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 post ovulation, were collected transcervically by uterine lavage, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and embedded in paraffin wax. Ten micron serial sections were stained to determine alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity in the cells. Positive cells were counted and their approximate location determined. The cells were approximately 8 microm in diameter and the entire cell, except the nucleus, stained strongly with many small round areas of intense staining in the cytoplasm. The cells varied from round to elongated in shape and pseudopo...
Spontaneous multiple ovulation and development of multiple embryonic vesicles in a mare. A Warmblood mare was observed to ovulate spontaneously 12 follicles within 2 days, none of which exceeded 22 mm in diameter. On Days 13 and 17 after ovulation, 6 embryonic vesicles were identified in the uterus by ultrasonography but by Day 26, 5 of the vesicles had disappeared. Development of the surviving conceptus was monitored until Day 42. Plasma progesterone concentrations rose to 14 ng/ml on Day 7, decreased over the next 8 days and then plateaued to around 4-6 ng/ml until Day 70. The occurrence of multiple spontaneous ovulations was diagnosed repeatedly in this mare. However, the devel...
An aspartic proteinase expressed in the equine placenta. This manuscript describes the cloning of a novel aspartic proteinase expressed in the placenta of the horse (order Perrisodactyla). Evidence for similar genes in the cat (Carnivora) and ruminants (Artiodactyla), indicates that these molecules have been conserved within widely divergent species with distinct types of placentation. Since ePAG is produced by the outer cell layer (trophoblast) of the placenta, it can tentatively be grouped with the pregnancy-associated glycoproteins (PAG) of cattle, sheep, and pig. The high sequence identity that ePAG shares with pepsinogens as well as the PAG, in...