Analyze Diet

Topic:Energy Metabolism

Energy metabolism in horses refers to the biochemical processes that convert nutrients into energy within the body, supporting various physiological functions. This process involves the breakdown of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the primary energy carrier in cells. Key metabolic pathways include glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation. Energy metabolism is essential for maintaining muscle function, thermoregulation, and overall health in horses. Factors such as diet, exercise, and health status can influence these metabolic processes. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, regulation, and implications of energy metabolism in equine physiology.
Quantification of the energy expenditure during training exercises in Standardbred trotters.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    December 19, 2014   Volume 9, Issue 5 793-799 doi: 10.1017/S1751731114003139
Fortier J, Deley G, Goachet AG, Julliand V.An appropriate energy feeding management that ensures the optimal dietary energy supply according to the energy expenditure (EE) is a crucial component for the horse's performance. The main purpose of this study was to determine the EE during four specific exercises used in the training of Standardbred trotters (promenade, jogging, parcours and interval work-outs). A total of six Standardbred geldings performed four different testing situations on a track. The intensity (expressed in percentage of the maximal velocity over 500 m, i.e. v500) and volume (distance and duration) of the testing sit...
The effect of weightbearing and limb load cycling on equine lamellar perfusion and energy metabolism measured using tissue microdialysis.
Equine veterinary journal    December 18, 2014   Volume 48, Issue 1 114-119 doi: 10.1111/evj.12377
Medina-Torres CE, Underwood C, Pollitt CC, Castro-Olivera EM, Hodson MP, Richardson DW, van Eps AW.Lamellar perfusion is thought to be affected by weightbearing and limb load cycling; this may be critical in the development of supporting limb laminitis. Objective: To document the effects of unilateral weightbearing and altered limb load cycling on lamellar energy metabolism and perfusion. Methods: Randomised, controlled (within subject), experimental trial. Methods: Nine Standardbred horses were instrumented with microdialysis probes in the foot lamellar tissue and skin (over the tail base). Urea (20 mmol/l) was added to the perfusate. Samples were collected every 15 min for a 1 h con...
Implementation of field cardio-respiratory measurements to assess energy expenditure in Arabian endurance horses.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    December 15, 2014   Volume 9, Issue 5 787-792 doi: 10.1017/S1751731114003061
Goachet AG, Julliand V.Measurements of respiratory exchanges in genuine exercise conditions are undoubtedly of interest to further define the energy needs of endurance horses. However, the equine K4b2, the gas exchanges portable device validated for equines, has not been used in Arabian endurance horses yet. Therefore, the objective of this study was to implement field cardio-respiratory measurements in such horses using the equine K4b2 in order to assess energy expenditure (EE). Measurements of heart rate (HR), oxygen uptake (VO2), carbon dioxide production (VCO2), respiratory frequency (RF), tidal volume (VT) and ...
Investigation of the stallion sperm proteome by mass spectrometry.
Reproduction (Cambridge, England)    December 12, 2014   Volume 149, Issue 3 235-244 doi: 10.1530/REP-14-0500
Swegen A, Curry BJ, Gibb Z, Lambourne SR, Smith ND, Aitken RJ.Stallion spermatozoa continue to present scientific and clinical challenges with regard to the biological mechanisms responsible for their survival and function. In particular, deeper understanding of sperm energy metabolism, defence against oxidative damage and cell-cell interactions should improve fertility assessment and the application of advanced reproductive technologies in the equine species. In this study, we used highly sensitive LC-MS/MS technology and sequence database analysis to identify and characterise the proteome of Percoll-isolated ejaculated equine spermatozoa, with the aim ...
Complex evolutionary patterns revealed by mitochondrial genomes of the domestic horse.
Current molecular medicine    December 4, 2014   Volume 14, Issue 10 1286-1298 doi: 10.2174/1566524014666141203100940
Ning T, Li J, Lin K, Xiao H, Wylie S, Hua S, Li H, Zhang YP.The domestic horse is the most widely used and important stock and recreational animal, valued for its strength and endurance. The energy required by the domestic horse is mainly supplied by mitochondria via oxidative phosphorylation. Thus, selection may have played an essential role in the evolution of the horse mitochondria. Besides, demographic events also affect the DNA polymorphic pattern on mitochondria. To understand the evolutionary patterns of the mitochondria of the domestic horse, we used a deep sequencing approach to obtain the complete sequences of 15 mitochondrial genomes, and fo...
Nutritional ecology of obesity: from humans to companion animals.
The British journal of nutrition    November 21, 2014   Volume 113 Suppl S26-S39 doi: 10.1017/S0007114514002323
Raubenheimer D, Machovsky-Capuska GE, Gosby AK, Simpson S.We apply nutritional geometry, a framework for modelling the interactive effects of nutrients on animals, to help understand the role of modern environments in the obesity pandemic. Evidence suggests that humans regulate the intake of protein energy (PE) more strongly than non-protein energy (nPE), and consequently will over- and under-ingest nPE on diets with low or high PE, respectively. This pattern of macronutrient regulation has led to the protein leverage hypothesis, which proposes that the rise in obesity has been caused partly by a shift towards diets with reduced PE:nPE ratios relativ...
Preliminary investigation into a potential role for myostatin and its receptor (ActRIIB) in lean and obese horses and ponies.
PloS one    November 12, 2014   Volume 9, Issue 11 e112621 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112621
Morrison PK, Bing C, Harris PA, Maltin CA, Grove-White D, Argo CM.Obesity is a widespread problem across the leisure population of horses and ponies in industrialised nations. Skeletal muscle is a major contributor to whole body resting energy requirements and communicates with other tissues through the secretion of myokines into the circulation. Myostatin, a myokine and negative regulator of skeletal muscle mass, has been implicated in obesity development in other species. This study evaluated gene and protein expression of myostatin and its receptor, ActRIIB in adipose tissues and skeletal muscles and serum myostatin concentrations in six lean and six obes...
Saving energy during hard times: energetic adaptations of Shetland pony mares.
The Journal of experimental biology    October 30, 2014   Volume 217, Issue Pt 24 4320-4327 doi: 10.1242/jeb.111815
Brinkmann L, Gerken M, Hambly C, Speakman JR, Riek A.Recent results suggest that wild Northern herbivores reduce their metabolism during times of low ambient temperature and food shortage in order to reduce their energetic needs. It is, however, not known whether domesticated animals are also able to reduce their energy expenditure. We exposed 10 Shetland pony mares to different environmental conditions (summer and winter) and to two food quantities (60% and 100% of maintenance energy requirement) during low winter temperatures to examine energetic and behavioural responses. In summer, ponies showed a considerably higher field metabolic rate (FM...
Effect of holding equine oocytes in meiosis inhibitor-free medium before in vitro maturation and of holding temperature on meiotic suppression and mitochondrial energy/redox potential.
Reproductive biology and endocrinology : RB&E    October 11, 2014   Volume 12 99 doi: 10.1186/1477-7827-12-99
Martino NA, Dell'Aquila ME, Filioli Uranio M, Rutigliano L, Nicassio M, Lacalandra GM, Hinrichs K.Evaluation of mitochondrial function offers an alternative to evaluate embryo development for assessment of oocyte viability, but little information is available on the relationship between mitochondrial and chromatin status in equine oocytes. We evaluated these parameters in immature equine oocytes either fixed immediately (IMM) or held overnight in an Earle's/Hank's' M199-based medium in the absence of meiotic inhibitors (EH treatment), and in mature oocytes. We hypothesized that EH holding may affect mitochondrial function and that holding temperature may affect the efficiency of meiotic su...
[Feed management in horse husbandry].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    October 3, 2014   Volume 139, Issue 9 43-45 
Errens AV.No abstract available
The genetics of skeletal muscle disorders in horses.
Annual review of animal biosciences    September 12, 2014   Volume 3 197-217 doi: 10.1146/annurev-animal-022114-110653
Mickelson JR, Valberg SJ.Horses are remarkable athletes and a fascinating species in which to study the genetic bases of athletic performance, skeletal muscle biology, and neuromuscular disease. Genetic selection in horses has resulted in many breeds that possess anatomical, physiological, and metabolic variations linked to speed, power, and endurance that are beginning to be defined at the molecular level. Along with the concentration of positive traits, equine breeding programs have also inadvertently concentrated heritable muscle diseases for which mutations impacting electrical conduction, muscle contraction, and ...
Changes in oxidative stress in response to different levels of energy restriction in obese ponies.
The British journal of nutrition    September 2, 2014   Volume 112, Issue 8 1402-1411 doi: 10.1017/S0007114514001974
Bruynsteen L, Janssens GP, Harris PA, Duchateau L, Valle E, Odetti P, Vandevelde K, Buyse J, Hesta M.The present study evaluated the effect of different levels of energy restriction on metabolic parameters in obese ponies. Relative weight changes, markers of lipid metabolism and oxidant/antioxidant balance were monitored. A total of eighteen obese (body condition score ≥ 7/9) Shetland ponies were studied over a 23·5-week trial, which was divided into three periods. The first period involved a 4-week adaptation period in which each animal was fed 100% of their maintenance energy requirements needed to maintain a stable obese body weight (MERob). This was followed by a 16·5-week weight-loss...
[Energy intake and body weight development of Warmblood foals that changed stud at weaning].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe G, Grosstiere/Nutztiere    August 15, 2014   Volume 42, Issue 4 220-224 
Mack JK, Remler HP, Senckenberg E, Kienzle E.This study investigated the energy requirements of Warmblood foals with a change of the stud at weaning. Methods: Nine colts purchased at weaning participated in the study aged approximately 6 months to 1 year. They were transported to the stud by their breeders either having been separated from their dams in their home stable or upon arrival at the stud. The foals were offered a late first cut of haylage, oats and foal starter feed. To ensure individual feeding of concentrates, the foals were tethered twice daily. The total combined haylage intake of all foals per day was recorded. Individu...
Prospection of genomic regions divergently selected in racing line of Quarter Horses in relation to cutting line.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    July 17, 2014   Volume 8, Issue 11 1754-1764 doi: 10.1017/S1751731114001761
Meira CT, Curi RA, Farah MM, de Oliveira HN, Béltran NA, Silva JA, Mota MD.Selection of Quarter Horses for different purposes has led to the formation of lines, including racing and cutting horses. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions divergently selected in racing line of Quarter Horses in relation to cutting line applying relative extended haplotype homozygosity (REHH) analysis, an extension of extended haplotype homozygosity (EHH) analysis, and the fixation index (F ST) statistic. A total of 188 horses of both sexes, born between 1985 and 2009 and registered at the Brazilian Association of Quarter Horse Breeders, including 120 of the racing ...
The effect of dietary carbohydrate composition on apparent total tract digestibility, feed mean retention time, nitrogen and water balance in horses.
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    July 14, 2014   Volume 8, Issue 11 1788-1796 doi: 10.1017/S175173111400175X
Jensen RB, Austbø D, Bach Knudsen KE, Tauson AH.A total of four diets with different carbohydrate composition were investigated in a 4×4 Latin square design experiment with four Norwegian Coldblooded trotter horses. The objective of the present study was to increase the fermentable fibre content and reduce the starch intake of the total ration obtained by partly substituting mature hay and barley with sugar beet pulp (SBP), a soluble fibre source. The diets investigated were hay only (HAY), hay (85% of dry matter intake (DMI)) and molassed SBP (15% of DMI) (SBP), hay (68% of DMI) and barley (32% of DMI) (BAR), and hay (68% of DMI), barley ...
How does the suppression of energy supplementation affect herbage intake, performance and parasitism in lactating saddle mares?
Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience    June 2, 2014   Volume 8, Issue 8 1290-1297 doi: 10.1017/S175173111400127X
Collas C, Fleurance G, Cabaret J, Martin-Rosset W, Wimel L, Cortet J, Dumont B.Agroecology opens up new perspectives for the design of sustainable farming systems by using the stimulation of natural processes to reduce the inputs needed for production. In horse farming systems, the challenge is to maximize the proportion of forages in the diet, and to develop alternatives to synthetic chemical drugs for controlling gastrointestinal nematodes. Lactating saddle mares, with high nutritional requirements, are commonly supplemented with concentrates at pasture, although the influence of energy supplementation on voluntary intake, performance and immune response against parasi...
Equine lamellar energy metabolism studied using tissue microdialysis.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 27, 2014   Volume 201, Issue 3 275-282 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2014.05.030
Medina-Torres CE, Pollitt CC, Underwood C, Castro-Olivera EM, Collins SN, Allavena RE, Richardson DW, van Eps AW.Failure of lamellar energy metabolism may contribute to the pathophysiology of equine laminitis. Tissue microdialysis has the potential to dynamically monitor lamellar energy balance over time. The objectives of this study were to develop a minimally invasive lamellar microdialysis technique and use it to measure normal lamellar energy metabolite concentrations over 24 h. Microdialysis probes were placed (through the white line) into either the lamellar dermis (LAM) (n = 6) or the sublamellar dermis (SUBLAM) (n = 6) and perfused continuously over a 24 h study period. Probes were pl...
Effect of dietary nonstructural carbohydrate content on activation of 5′-adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase in liver, skeletal muscle, and digital laminae of lean and obese ponies.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    April 20, 2014   Volume 28, Issue 4 1280-1288 doi: 10.1111/jvim.12356
Burns TA, Watts MR, Weber PS, McCutcheon LJ, Geor RJ, Belknap JK.In EMS-associated laminitis, laminar failure may occur in response to energy failure related to insulin resistance (IR) or to the effect of hyperinsulinemia on laminar tissue. 5'-Adenosine-monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a marker of tissue energy deprivation, which may occur in IR. Objective: To characterize tissue AMPK regulation in ponies subjected to a dietary carbohydrate (CHO) challenge. Methods: Twenty-two mixed-breed ponies. Methods: Immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting for total AMPK and phospho(P)-AMPK and RT-qPCR for AMPK-responsive genes were performed on laminar...
Weight-making strategies in professional jockeys: implications for physical and mental health and well-being.
Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)    April 1, 2014   Volume 44, Issue 6 785-796 doi: 10.1007/s40279-014-0169-7
Wilson G, Drust B, Morton JP, Close GL.Professional jockeys are unique amongst weight-making athletes given that they face the requirement to make weight daily. Furthermore, unlike other weight-limited sports, jockeys who have engaged in rapid weight loss cannot fully rehydrate prior to competition because post-race weight must not be more than 1 kg different to their pre-race weight. As such, jockeys have reported a variety of acute and chronic methods to make weight that include sporadic eating, caloric restriction, diuretics, laxatives, vomiting and fluid restriction as well as regular use of sweat suits and saunas. Typical dai...
Protein catabolism and high lipid metabolism associated with long-distance exercise are revealed by plasma NMR metabolomics in endurance horses.
PloS one    March 21, 2014   Volume 9, Issue 3 e90730 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090730
Le Moyec L, Robert C, Triba MN, Billat VL, Mata X, Schibler L, Barrey E.During long distance endurance races, horses undergo high physiological and metabolic stresses. The adaptation processes involve the modulation of the energetic pathways in order to meet the energy demand. The aims were to evaluate the effects of long endurance exercise on the plasma metabolomic profiles and to investigate the relationships with the individual horse performances. The metabolomic profiles of the horses were analyzed using the non-dedicated methodology, NMR spectroscopy and statistical multivariate analysis. The advantage of this method is to investigate several metabolomic path...
Effect of physical training on nutrient digestibility and faecal fermentative parameters in Standardbred horses.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    March 3, 2014   Volume 98, Issue 6 1081-1087 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12177
Goachet AG, Harris P, Philippeau C, Julliand V.This study aimed at evaluating, in previously inactive Standardbreds horses, the effect of 5 weeks of an exercise training programme on nutrient digestibility and faecal fermentative parameters (FFPs). As an increase in digestibility had previously been reported in trained endurance horses, we hypothesized that similar results would be found in horses being trained for other types of exercise on a different type of diet. After 3 weeks of dietary adaptation, a digestibility trial (DT1) was undertaken, over 3 days, in eight untrained Standardbreds with a fresh faecal sample being collected on th...
Dietary experience modifies horses’ feeding behavior and selection patterns of three macronutrient rich diets.
Journal of animal science    February 4, 2014   Volume 92, Issue 4 1524-1530 doi: 10.2527/jas.2012-5579
Redgate SE, Cooper JJ, Hall S, Eady P, Harris PA.Choice feeding is often used to investigate an animal's nutritional requirements and dietary preferences. A problem with this approach is that animals with long gut transit times, such as the horse, may find it difficult to associate a chosen food with its nutritional consequence when alternative foods are presented simultaneously. One solution is to present foods singly for a period of time before a simultaneous choice session to allow the development of learned associations. This method was used to determine if horse's voluntary intake and feeding behavior was influenced by the macronutrient...
No effect of moderate or high concentrate allowance on growth parameters in weanling Warmblood foals fed late-cut haylage as forage.
Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition    January 15, 2014   Volume 98, Issue 5 886-893 doi: 10.1111/jpn.12153
Mack JK, Remler HP, Senckenberg E, Kienzle E.Two groups of Warmblood foals from the Bavarian federal stud participated in the study beginning from the age of approximately 6 months. The foals were offered a late 1st cut of haylage, oats and foal starter feed. For 2 months after weaning, group 'R' (15 foals) received an amount of oats to provide a total digestible energy supply meeting the recommendations of the German Society of Nutrition Physiology (GfE), whereas the other group 'A' (16 foals) was offered a higher amount of oats (surplus of approximately 1.3 kg/animal/day). Concentrates were fed individually twice daily; total daily ...
Sarcoid-derived fibroblasts: links between genomic instability, energy metabolism and senescence.
Biochimie    October 19, 2013   Volume 97 163-172 doi: 10.1016/j.biochi.2013.10.010
Potocki L, Lewinska A, Klukowska-Rötzler J, Bielak-Zmijewska A, Grabowska W, Rzeszutek I, Kaminska P, Roga E, Bugno-Poniewierska M, Slota E....Bovine papillomavirus 1 (BPV-1) is a well recognized etiopathogenetic factor in a cancer-like state in horses, namely equine sarcoid disease. Nevertheless, little is known about BPV-1-mediated cell transforming effects. It was shown that BPV-1 triggers genomic instability through DNA hypomethylation and oxidative stress. In the present study, we further characterized BPV-1-positive fibroblasts derived from sarcoid tumors. The focus was on cancer-like features of sarcoid-derived fibroblasts, including cell cycle perturbation, comprehensive DNA damage analysis, end-replication problem, energy me...
Anatomically asymmetrical runners move more asymmetrically at the same metabolic cost.
PloS one    September 24, 2013   Volume 8, Issue 9 e74134 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074134
Seminati E, Nardello F, Zamparo P, Ardigò LP, Faccioli N, Minetti AE.We hypothesized that, as occurring in cars, body structural asymmetries could generate asymmetry in the kinematics/dynamics of locomotion, ending up in a higher metabolic cost of transport, i.e. more 'fuel' needed to travel a given distance. Previous studies found the asymmetries in horses' body negatively correlated with galloping performance. In this investigation, we analyzed anatomical differences between the left and right lower limbs as a whole by performing 3D cross-correlation of Magnetic Resonance Images of 19 male runners, clustered as Untrained Runners, Occasional Runners and Skille...
Somatotropic axis resistance and ghrelin in critically ill foals.
Equine veterinary journal    June 28, 2013   Volume 46, Issue 1 45-49 doi: 10.1111/evj.12086
Barsnick RJ, Hurcombe SD, Dembek K, Frazer ML, Slovis NM, Saville WJ, Toribio RE.Resistance to the somatotropic axis and increases in ghrelin concentrations have been documented in critically ill human patients, but limited information exists in healthy or sick foals. Objective: To investigate components of the somatotropic axis (ghrelin, growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 [IGF-1]) with regard to energy metabolism (glucose and triglycerides), severity of disease and survival in critically ill equine neonates. It was hypothesised that ghrelin and growth hormone would increase and IGF-1 would decrease in proportion to severity of disease, supporting somatotropic...
Skeletal muscle transcriptome profiles related to different training intensities and detraining in Standardbred horses: a search for overtraining biomarkers.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    May 11, 2013   Volume 197, Issue 3 717-723 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2013.03.052
te Pas MF, Wijnberg ID, Hoekman AJ, de Graaf-Roelfsema E, Keizer HA, van Breda E, Ducro B, van der Kolk JH.Training horses improves athletic capabilities by inducing skeletal muscle-specific and systemic adaptations. However, rest is required to recover from exercise or else overtraining may occur and affect performance and welfare. Biomarkers would be useful to identify early chronic overtraining in animals. The objective of the current study was to investigate skeletal muscle gene expression patterns and underlying biological mechanisms related to training of different intensities and detraining. Untrained 20 month-old Standardbred geldings were exercised at varying intensities (endurance and spr...
Immunolocalization of succinate dehydrogenase in the esophagus epithelium of domesticated mammals.
European journal of histochemistry : EJH    May 10, 2013   Volume 57, Issue 2 e18 doi: 10.4081/ejh.2013.e18
Meyer W, Kacza J, Hornickel IN, Schoennagel B.Using immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), the esophagus epithelia of seven domesticated mammals (horse, cattle, goat, pig, dog, laboratory rat, cat) of three nutrition groups (herbivorous, omnivorous, carnivorous) were studied to get first information about energy generation, as demonstrated by succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activities. Distinct reaction intensities could be observed in all esophageal cell layers of the different species studied reflecting moderate to strong metabolic activities. The generally strong staining in the stratum basale indicated that new...
The development and evaluation of a mathematical nutrition model to predict digestible energy intake of broodmares based on body condition changes.
Journal of animal science    February 19, 2013   Volume 91, Issue 5 2169-2177 doi: 10.2527/jas.2011-4659
Cordero VV, Cavinder CA, Tedeschi LO, Sigler DH, Vogelsang MM, Arnold CE.Mathematical nutrition models have been developed for beef and dairy cattle to estimate dietary energy intake needed to change BCS. Similar technology has not been used to improve nutrition and feeding strategies for horses. An accurate equine nutrition model may enhance feeding management and reduce the costs of unnecessary overfeeding and promote an optimal level of fatness to achieve reproductive efficiency. The objectives of this study were to develop and evaluate a mathematical nutrition model capable of accurately predicting dietary energy changes to alter BW, rump fat (RF) thickness, an...
Dietary restriction in combination with a nutraceutical supplement for the management of equine metabolic syndrome in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    November 8, 2012   Volume 196, Issue 2 153-159 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2012.10.007
McGowan CM, Dugdale AH, Pinchbeck GL, Argo CM.Few studies have examined the effect of dietary restriction in horses with equine metabolic syndrome (EMS). This study aimed to determine improvements in insulin sensitivity following dietary restriction for 6 weeks, and to determine if the improvement would be greater in horses receiving short-chain fructo-oligosaccharides (sc-FOS). Dietary management involved feeding grass hay, restricted to 1.25% of body mass (BM) as daily dry matter intake and soaked in cold water prior to feeding, with the addition of a vitamin and mineral nutraceutical supplement with or without the addition of sc-FOS (1...
1 3 4 5 6 7 14