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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.
Induction of superovulation in DD mice at different stages of the oestrous cycle.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1994   Volume 102, Issue 2 263-267 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1020263
Redina OE, Amstislavsky SYa , Maksimovsky LF.This study examined the developmental capacity of oocytes in DD mice after they had been injected with pregnant mares' serum gonadotrophin at different stages of the oestrous cycle. The superovulation of mature DD mice at pro-oestrus, oestrus and metoestrus resulted in a large yield of viable embryos. The proportion of abnormal embryos was highest after injection of pregnant mares' serum gonadotrophin at dioestrus. The pool of viable oocytes was most synchronized with normal development after the hormone was injected at oestrus. The results demonstrate that oocytes of different morphology coul...
In vitro viability of cryopreserved equine embryos following different freezing protocols.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    October 1, 1994   Volume 58, Issue 4 235-241 
Poitras P, Guay P, Vaillancourt D, Zidane N, Bigras-Poulin M.The main objective of this study was to evaluate two freezing protocols and the effect of agar embedding on survival of day 6.5 equine embryos. A total of 133 embryos were used, in one group (n = 51), embryos were first embedded in agar before the freezing protocol was started. A freezing protocol to -30 degrees C or -33 degrees C was used before plunging embryos into liquid nitrogen (LN2). The embryos were thawed in water at 37 degrees C, evaluated and placed in culture. After 24 h culture, the embryos were evaluated for their morphology and development. No differences were observed between e...
Maternal influences on growth and development of full-sibling foals.
Journal of animal science    July 1, 1994   Volume 72, Issue 7 1661-1666 doi: 10.2527/1994.7271661x
Pool-Anderson K, Raub RH, Warren JA.Six pairs of full-sibling Quarter Horse foals were produced by non-surgical embryo transfer and immediate rebreeding of donor mares. Each pair of donor/recipient mares consisted of one multiparous (donor) and one nulliparous (recipient) mare of similar body type and size. Milk yield was determined within 2 d of 8, 15, 22, 29 d (early lactation); 45, 60 d (midlactation); and 90, 120 d (late lactation) postpartum by the weigh-suckle-weigh method. On the following day, milk samples were collected, and foals were weighed and measured for wither height, heart girth, metacarpal length, metatarsal le...
The equine embryonic capsule practical implications of recent research.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 3 184-186 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1994.tb04366.x
Oriol JG.In most domestic animals, the zona pellucida is the outermost extracellular layer that covers the blastocyst before implantation. However, in the horse, an acellular membrane, the capsule, replaces the zona pellucida and envelops the developing conceptus during the 2nd and 3rd weeks of gestation. Although this structure was first described by Bonnet in 1889, it received little attention until the 1970s when its rediscovery by Marrable and Flood (1975) led to a series of reports (see review by Betteridge 1989). Nevertheless, until recently the structure, origin, and function of the capsule have...
The horse feto-placental unit.
Experimental and clinical endocrinology    January 1, 1994   Volume 102, Issue 3 166-168 doi: 10.1055/s-0029-1211277
Möstl E.In the pregnant mare two different groups of oestrogens are produced by the placenta. The precursor of "classical" oestrogens (oestrone, oestradiol-17 beta and oestradiol-17 alpha) is dehydroepiandrosterone which originates from the fetal gonads. The ring B unsaturated oestrogens (equilin and equilenin and their derivatives) derive from farnesyl pyrophosphate by a pathway not involving cholesterol.
Binding of epidermal growth factor and transforming growth factor-alpha in mammalian preimplantation embryos.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1994   Volume 41, Issue 4 879-887 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(94)90503-b
Fischer B, Rose-Hellekant TA, Sheffield LG, Bertics PJ, Bavister BD.Preimplantation embryos of the pig (Days 11 to 15), cow (Days 14 to 16), sheep (Day 14) and pony (Day 16) bind epidermal growth factor (EGF) specifically. Binding was not detected in embryos of the rabbit at Day 5 or 6 or the hamster at Day 3. Transforming growth factor-alpha displaced [(125)I] EGF in pig, cow and pony embryos almost as much as unlabeled EGF. The binding affinities of EGF ranged from 12 to 233 pM in pig and cow embryos. The range of species and binding features indicate that the EGF family may play a significant role in mammalian preimplantation development.
The equine placenta and equine chorionic gonadotrophin–an overview.
Experimental and clinical endocrinology    January 1, 1994   Volume 102, Issue 3 235-243 doi: 10.1055/s-0029-1211287
Hoppen HO.Chorionic gonadotrophins seem to be unique for primate and equid species. Unlike primates, the equine conceptus does not implant in the maternal uterine endometrium until around day 37 of pregnancy. At this time specialized cells of the trophoblast, organized in the embryonic girdle, invade the endometrium and become established in the endometrial stroma, forming the so-called endometrial cups. This migration of girdle cells is accompanied by their morphological transformation into large decidual-like cells and by the appearance of a gonadotrophic hormone in the mare's blood. There is convinci...
Pregnancies following transfer of equine embryos cryopreserved by vitrification.
Theriogenology    January 1, 1994   Volume 42, Issue 3 483-488 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(94)90686-d
Hochi S, Fujimoto T, Braun J, Oguri N.The objective of this study was to investigate the in vitro and in vivo developmental abilities of equine embryos cryopreserved by vitrification. Twenty-eight embryos were recovered from Native pony and Thoroughbred mares at Days 5 to 7 by nonsurgical uterine flushing (detection of ovulation=Day 0). The vitrification solution contained 40% ethylene glycol, 18% Ficoll, and 0.3 M sucrose in PBS. The embryos were placed for 1 to 2 min in vitrification solution (Group 1) or following exposure to 20% ethylene glycol in PBS for 10 to 20 min (Groups 2 and 3). Single embryos were loaded in 0.25-ml str...
Respiratory mechanics of the horse during the first year of life.
Respiration physiology    January 1, 1994   Volume 95, Issue 1 21-41 doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(94)90045-0
Koterba AM, Wozniak JA, Kosch PC.This study investigated the developmental changes in the mechanical properties of the respiratory system in growing horses. Pulmonary mechanics and lung volumes were serially measured in anesthetized foals during the first year of life. Quasi-static pressure-volume curves were generated, and functional residual capacity (FRC) was measured using a closed nitrogen equilibration technique. At birth, chest wall compliance normalized to body weight was substantially less than that reported in other less precocious newborn species, while lung compliance normalized to body weight was similar to value...
The relationship of daily sperm production with number of Sertoli cells and testicular size in adult horses: role of primitive spermatogonia.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    January 1, 1994   Volume 100, Issue 1 315-321 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1000315
Johnson L, Carter GK, Varner DD, Taylor TS, Blanchard TL, Rembert MS.The number of Sertoli cells is important in spermatogenesis as noted by significant correlations between the number of Sertoli cells and the number of germ cells observed as early as type B2 spermatogonia in the horse. However, the stage within spermatocytogenesis at which these relationships first occur is unclear. The relationships between the number of Sertoli cells and parenchymal weight and the number of germ cells during the mitosis of spermatogenesis were determined in 184 adult horses to identify the developmental stage (that is, the earliest germ cell) at which significant relationshi...
Developmentally regulated changes in the glycoproteins of the equine embryonic capsule.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1993   Volume 99, Issue 2 653-664 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0990653
Oriol JG, Sharom FJ, Betteridge KJ.The embryonic capsule, which covers the equine blastocyst after it loses its zona pellucida, is composed of mucin-like glycoproteins. In the present study, we investigated both macroscopic and molecular changes in the capsule during development. The weight of the capsule increased from day 11-12 of pregnancy and reached a maximum at about day 18, coinciding with the time during which the conceptus migrates extensively throughout the uterus. The sialic acid content of the capsule declined markedly from about day 16, the time of conceptus 'fixation' in the uterus, which suggests a unique develop...
Oviductal and uterine influence on the development of Day-2 equine embryos in vivo and in vitro.
Theriogenology    October 1, 1993   Volume 40, Issue 4 689-698 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(93)90205-j
Weber JA, Woods GL, Freeman DA, Vanderwall DK.The objective of this experiment was to contrast the influence of the oviductal and uterine environments on development of Day-2 embryos. Embryos were transferred to oviducts or uteri of synchronous recipient mares, or were incubated in oviductal co-culture, in uterine co-culture or in defined culture medium. Significantly more (P < 0.02) embryos transferred to the oviduct versus the uterus survived until Day 11 after ovulation (5 7 vs 0 7 , respectively). Significantly more (P 0.1) in oviductal co-culture versus uterine co-culture (3 7 vs 6 7 , respectively), or in oviductal co-culture ve...
Giant and binucleate trophoblast cells of mammals.
The Journal of experimental zoology    September 1, 1993   Volume 266, Issue 6 559-577 doi: 10.1002/jez.1402660607
Hoffman LH, Wooding FB.The cellular origin, structure, and function of trophoblastic giant cells (GC) and binucleate cells (BNC) are reviewed. Mammals in which these cells have received the greatest attention include rodents, rabbits, and humans (GCs), and ruminants and equids (BNCs). In almost all cases these cells arise from the cytotrophoblast. All are large cells and contain either two diploid nuclei (BNCs), multiple nuclei (human placental bed GCs), or single nuclei with amplified DNA content (rodent and rabbit GCs). Giant and binucleate cells typically exhibit the capacity for migration or invasion, although t...
Development to blastocysts of one- to two-cell equine embryos after coculture with uterine tubal epithelial cells.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 7 1139-1144 
Ball BA, Brinsko SP, Thomas PG, Miller PG, Ellington JE.Development of 1- to 2-cell in vivo fertilized equine embryos cultured with or without uterine tubal epithelial cells (UTEC) was studied. One- to 2-cell embryos (n = 26) were collected surgically from the uterine tubes of pony mares 1 day after ovulation. Four- to 8-cell embryos (n = 9) were collected 2 days after ovulation. Presumptive zygotes and 2-cell embryos were cultured with (n = 17) or without (n = 9) UTEC, and all 4- to 8-cell embryos were cocultured with UTEC as positive controls. Uterine tubal epithelial cells were used as cell suspensions within 2 weeks after initiation of cultures...
Developmental regulation of insulin like growth factor II expression in the horse.
Cell biology international    June 1, 1993   Volume 17, Issue 6 603-607 doi: 10.1006/cbir.1993.1105
Joujou-Sisic K, Granérus M, Wetterling H, Wikström K, Engström W, Jeffcott L, Schofield PN, Welin A.The expression of the insulin like growth factor (IGF) II gene has been examined in the developing equine fetus. It was found that IGF II transcripts were present in abundant quantities in third trimester embryonic and extraembryonic tissues as for example the placenta. The expression of the IGF II gene was high in the fetal liver where two prominent transcripts--4.6 and 4.1--kB were produced. However, these transcripts could not be traced in the adult liver. Instead we found two different transcripts with the sizes of 4.0 and 2.9 kB in the adult liver. These findings taken together with the d...
Effects of fetal genotype and uterine environment on placental development in equids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    May 1, 1993   Volume 98, Issue 1 55-60 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0980055
Allen WR, Skidmore JA, Stewart F, Antczak DF.Measurement of the concentrations of equine chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG) in the serum of pregnant mares and Jenny donkeys carrying normal intraspecies and hybrid interspecies pregnancies suggested that the production of this hormone may be influenced by parental gene imprinting. Specifically, a differential expression of maternal and paternal genes may control the size and secretory activity of the structures that secrete eCG, the fetal endometrial cups. However, bisection of an interspecies mule embryo followed by transfer of the resulting demi-embryos and other intact mule embryos to horse ...
Development of gastrointestinal functions in the foal: what can we learn from studies on man and experimental animals?
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 1, 1993   Issue 14 23-25 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb04804.x
Koldovsky O.No abstract available
Maturation of the cardiopulmonary system.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 1, 1993   Issue 14 26-30 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb04805.x
Cottrill CM.No abstract available
Placentas and foetal health.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 1, 1993   Issue 14 8-11 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb04801.x
Collins MH.The placenta provides many critical services to the developing foetus. Proper placental implantation, growth and function are necessary for normal foetal growth and development. Placental structure varies widely among species but all mammalian placentas have a convoluted materno-foetal interface that may be quite simple or highly complex; the more complicated interdigitations tend to characterise smaller placentas that have limited areas of contact between the placenta and the endometrium. The intimacy of the contact between maternal and foetal tissue varies from apposition only, as in the equ...
Maturation of the central nervous system: comparison of equine and other species.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 1, 1993   Issue 14 31-34 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb04806.x
Sisken BF, Zwick M, Hyde JF, Cottrill CM.This review covers the development and maturation of the cerebellum of the horse and compares this developmental sequence with that of man, mouse and chicken. These comparisons attempt to correlate morphological and neurochemical features, developmental time and functional performance necessary for survival at birth. Although there is great disparity between these 3 species, the basic anatomical structures of the cerebellum are present as are specific cellular groups, synapses and neurochemical markers. In addition to this structural homogeneity, other attributes of the cerebellum are its easi...
Functional associations between collagen fibre orientation and locomotor strain direction in cortical bone of the equine radius.
Anatomy and embryology    March 1, 1993   Volume 187, Issue 3 231-238 doi: 10.1007/BF00195760
Riggs CM, Lanyon LE, Boyde A.A novel technique for determining the collagen fibre orientation pattern of cross-sections of cortical bone was used to study mid-diaphyseal sections from the equine radius. Several in vivo strain gauge studies have demonstrated that this bone is loaded in bending during locomotion in such a way that the cranial cortex is consistently subjected to longitudinal tensile strains and the caudal cortex to longitudinal compressive strains. Twenty-three radii from 17 horses were studied. All the bones obtained from adult horses exhibited a consistent pattern of collagen fibre orientation across the c...
[Prenatal development of the horse ovary].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    December 1, 1992   Volume 21, Issue 4 306-313 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1992.tb00462.x
Knospe C, Budras KD.To answer the many open questions concerning the development of the horse's ovary, first the prenatal development was investigated. It resulted that follicles derive from the germinal epithelium and its cords, whereas the Leydig cells and the rete blastema originate from the mesonephros. In the second third of pregnancy the Leydig cells undergo an enormous proliferation, in the last third they degenerate. However this degeneration is not connected with the postnatal development of the ovulation groove.
Developmental regulation of class I major histocompatibility complex antigen expression by equine trophoblastic cells.
Differentiation; research in biological diversity    December 1, 1992   Volume 52, Issue 1 69-78 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1992.tb00501.x
Donaldson WL, Oriol JG, Plavin A, Antczak DF.Between days 36-38 of pregnancy equine trophoblastic cells of the chorionic girdle migrate and form endometrial cups. Just prior to invasion, the chorionic girdle cells express high levels of polymorphic, paternally inherited, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigens. Their descendents, the mature, invasive trophoblast cells of the endometrial cups, however, express low or undetectable levels of MHC class I antigens by day 44 of pregnancy. Experiments with MHC compatible pregnancies, the study of residual chorionic girdle cells that had failed to invade the endometrium and remai...
The development of gluconeogenic enzymes in the liver and kidney of fetal and newborn foals.
Journal of developmental physiology    September 1, 1992   Volume 18, Issue 3 137-142 
Fowden AL, Mijovic J, Ousey JC, McGladdery A, Silver M.The activities of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6P), fructose diphosphatase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), aspartate and alanine transferases were measured in liver and kidney of fetal foals between 100-318 days of gestation (term approximately 335 days) and during the immediate postnatal period (0-48 h after birth). All 5 enzymes could be detected in the fetal liver and kidney at the youngest gestational age studied. Mean fetal activities were lower than those observed in their mothers and showed no change with gestational age for the majority of enzymes studied. However, renal PEPCK a...
The incidence of abnormal limb development in the Irish thoroughbred from birth to 18 months.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 4 305-309 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1992.tb02841.x
O'Donohue DD, Smith FH, Strickland KL.A two part survey was carried out in Irish Thoroughbred horses in 1988 and 1989 to establish the incidence and prevalence of developmental skeletal problems, particularly possible manifestations of developmental orthopaedic disease (DOD). Survey One was a retrospective study based on a questionnaire involving the foal crops of 46 stud farms for 3 successive seasons; the 1711 animals initially documented represented 10.46% of Irish foal registrations. The second survey involved repeated monitoring of the 1988 foal crop from birth to 18 months of age on 17 stud farms. The 248 foals initially exa...
Embryo-initiated oviductal transport in mares.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    July 1, 1992   Volume 95, Issue 2 535-538 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0950535
Freeman DA, Woods GL, Vanderwall DK, Weber JA.The hypothesis that equine embryos initiate oviductal transport in mares was tested by placing day 6 uterine embryos in the oviducts of day 2 (n = 10) or day 5 (n = 10) recipient mares and attempting to collect the embryos from the uterus 48 h later. To determine whether the surgical transfer procedure initiated oviductal transport, medium alone was placed in the oviducts of day 2 (n = 10) inseminated mares (sham transfer), and uterine embryo collections were attempted 48 h later. Embryos were transported through the oviduct of day 2 recipients by day 4 (instead of day 5 to 6) in six of ten ma...
Survival of equine embryos co-cultured with equine oviductal epithelium from the four- to eight-cell to the blastocyst stage after transfer to synchronous recipient mares.
Theriogenology    May 1, 1992   Volume 37, Issue 5 979-991 doi: 10.1016/0093-691x(92)90097-b
Ball BA, Miller PG.In this study we examined the ability of equine oviductal epithelial cells (OEC) to support the development of four- to eight-cell equine embryos in vitro and investigated the ability of co-cultured embryos to continue normal development after transfer to synchronous recipient mares. Equine embryos obtained at Day 2 after ovulation were cultured with or without OEC for 5 days. Those OEC co-cultured embryos that reached the blastocyst stage and embryos recovered from the uterus at Day 7 were surgically transferred to synchronous recipient mares. Co-culture with OEC improved (P < 0.01) develo...
Tissue-specific gene expression in the pituitary: the glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit gene is regulated by a gonadotrope-specific protein.
Molecular and cellular biology    May 1, 1992   Volume 12, Issue 5 2143-2153 doi: 10.1128/mcb.12.5.2143-2153.1992
Horn F, Windle JJ, Barnhart KM, Mellon PL.The molecular mechanisms for the development of multiple distinct endocrine cell types in the anterior pituitary have been an area of intensive investigation. Though the homeodomain protein Pit-1/GHF-1 is known to be involved in differentiation of the somatotrope and lactotrope lineages, which produce growth hormone and prolactin, respectively, little is known of the transcriptional regulators important for the gonadotrope cell lineage, which produces the glycoprotein hormones luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone. Using transgenic mice and transfection into a novel gonadotrope ...
Mediators of maternal recognition of pregnancy in mammals.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    April 1, 1992   Volume 199, Issue 4 373-384 doi: 10.3181/00379727-199-43371a
Bazer FW.No abstract available
Influence of age on fibre type characteristics in the middle gluteal muscle of Andalusian foals.
Histology and histopathology    April 1, 1992   Volume 7, Issue 2 157-162 
Martínez-Galisteo A, Diz A, Agüera E, Vivo J.34 Andalusian foals of both sexes were divided into three age-groups (A = mean age 1 month, B = 7 months, C = 14 months). Samples of the right m. gluteus medius were stained for m-ATPase and NADH-TR in order to determine fibre type composition and size as well as the relative area occupied by each type. Results revealed no statistically significant variation in the proportion of type I fibre among the three age-groups. Significant differences were recorded, however, for type II fibres; an increase in the proportion of IIA fibres was accompanied by a decrease in IIB ones, the difference being m...
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