Analyze Diet

Topic:Enzymes

Enzymes are biological catalysts that facilitate biochemical reactions in horses by lowering the activation energy required for these processes. They are involved in various physiological functions, including digestion, metabolism, and cellular repair. Common enzymes in equine biology include amylase, lipase, and lactate dehydrogenase, each playing a specific role in the breakdown of nutrients and energy production. The activity and concentration of these enzymes can vary in response to different physiological and pathological conditions, serving as potential indicators in veterinary diagnostics. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the function, regulation, and clinical implications of enzymes in equine health.
The reaction of sulphuric acid with lysozyme and horse globin.
Canadian journal of biochemistry and physiology    January 1, 1961   Volume 39 31-43 doi: 10.1139/o61-005
HABEEB AF.No abstract available
[Correlations between pancreatic elastases and chronic hypertrophic pulmonary emphysema in the horse].
Archivio per le scienze mediche    November 1, 1960   Volume 110 491-500 
PRETOLANI E, GIRO C, BEZZI G.No abstract available
Some observations on the isomerization of horse and human serum albumins.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    June 1, 1960   Volume 88 232-240 doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(60)90228-9
HORI J, AOKI K.Electrophoretic studies were made of normal horse and human serum albumins over the pH range 3.6–6.8 and at 25 °. The ionic strength of acetate or phosphate buffer used was 0.1, and the concentration of protein was 0.5% (g./100 ml.). Patterns were usually enantiographic and there were two (N and F1) or three (N, F1, and F2) boundaries in the pH range 3.6–5.2. The areas of the N and F1 boundaries changed continuously with pH, and the area of F2 was almost constant. The results were interpreted, in the same way as was previously done in the case of bovine serum albumin, by the isomerization...
Safety of intravenous proteolytic enzymes (varizyme) in equine practice.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 15, 1960   Volume 136 73-74 
BRAYE ET, HINSMAN EJ, RILEY WF.No horse receiving combined streptokinase, streptodornase, and human plasminogen alone in either 125,000-unit or 375,000-unit doses manifested any clinical reaction. Untoward reactions occurred in 2 horses receiving both the combined streptokinase, streptodornase, and human plasminogen (125,000 units), and chlortetracycline. The reaction was transitory and subsided without treatment.
Failure of equine arterial heterografts treated by controlled peptic proteolysis.
A.M.A. archives of surgery    November 1, 1958   Volume 77, Issue 5 796-803 doi: 10.1001/archsurg.1958.01290040144018
NEWTON WT, RAY AH, BUTCHER HR.No abstract available
The relationship between cholinesterase activity and the effects of succinylcholine chloride in the horse and cow.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1958   Volume 48, Issue 3 241-259 
STOWE CM, BIETER RN, ROEPKE MH.No abstract available
Enzymes in the ileal juice of the horse.
Nature    January 18, 1958   Volume 181, Issue 4603 190 doi: 10.1038/181190a0
ALEXANDER F, CHOWDHURY AK.No abstract available
[Effect of the products of enzymatic hydrolysis of foal serum on the growth of HeLa cells].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    December 1, 1957   Volume 93, Issue 6 766-771 
DANIEL P, SLIZEWICZ P, LEPINE P.No abstract available
The oxidation of cystamine and homocystamine by mammalian enzymes.
British journal of pharmacology and chemotherapy    December 1, 1957   Volume 12, Issue 4 513-516 doi: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1957.tb00174.x
BERGERET B, BLASCHKO H.The oxidative deamination of cystamine and homocystamine by mammalian oxidases has been studied. The histaminase of pig kidney oxidizes homocystamine much more slowly than cystamine. The amine oxidase of mammalian liver (guinea-pig, rabbit) oxidizes homocystamine more rapidly than cystamine. Both amines are oxidized by plasma (or serum) of ruminants (ox, sheep, goat) and of the horse. In the enzymatic oxidation of homocystamine both aminogroups are removed; there is no evidence that a ring compound analogous to cystaldimine is accumulating.
Proteolytic enzyme therapy in equine practice.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 15, 1957   Volume 131, Issue 6 289-291 
DAKIN WV.No abstract available
The effect of ferrimyoglobin on the oxidation of succinic acid by horse heart muscle preparations.
Experientia    October 15, 1955   Volume 11, Issue 10 399-400 doi: 10.1007/BF02158505
AZZONE GF.In a series of model reactions, it is shown that residues of ~-aminoacids may be inserted by a particular rearrangement into certain carboxyl or carbonylamido groups. Repeated insertion results in the formation of a peptide derivative. It is concluded that natural peptides or proteins must not necessarily be formed by head to tail combination of aminoacids, Other implications of the new principle are discussed.
Phyrophosphatase from horse erythrocytes; inorganic inhibitors and activators.
Acta physiologica Scandinavica    November 1, 1954   Volume 32, Issue 2-3 191-199 doi: 10.1111/j.1748-1716.1954.tb01166.x
SJOBERG K.No abstract available
Levels of some chemical constituents in normal horse sera.
Journal of comparative pathology    October 1, 1953   Volume 63, Issue 4 286-293 doi: 10.1016/s0368-1742(53)80030-5
JENNINGS FW, MULLIGAN W.THE chemical analyses reported in this paper arc the result of an investigation on the sera of thirty normal horses from a heavy draught horse stable in Glasgow. Determinations have been made of scrum proteins (albumin and total globulin), alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin, calcium, magnesium, inorganic phosphate and urea. Estimations of some of these constituents have already been carried out by a number of workers, but in the majority of cases the investigation has been confined to one or two constituents relevant to the problem being studied, and many of the data available are a by-product of...
[Changes of the serum cholinesterase in the horse as measured by paper electrophoresis].
Experientia    March 15, 1953   Volume 9, Issue 3 106-107 doi: 10.1007/BF02178340
TOGNI GP, MEIER O.The paper-electrophoresis of horse-serum has shown, that the cholinesterase migrates with the β-globulin-fraction.
Some aspects of the desoxyribonuclease activities of animal tissues.
The Journal of general physiology    November 1, 1952   Volume 36, Issue 2 227-241 doi: 10.1085/jgp.36.2.227
ALLFREY V, MIRSKY AE.It has been found that many animal tissues contain "acid" desoxyribonucleases with pH optima near 5.2. A chemical method for the determination of this activity is described. The pancreatic desoxyribonuclease crystallized by Kunitz and shown to have a neutral pH optimum occurs in the pancreas together with the "acid" enzyme, but only the "neutral" enzyme occurs in the pancreatic juice. The ratio of "neutral" to "acid" DNAase activities in the pancreas is greater than 200, but in all other tissues examined there is no appreciable concentration of the neutral enzyme. It is concluded that neutral ...
[Study of the amino acids formed by hydrolysis of horse globin by crystalline pepsin, trypsin and chymotrypsin].
Biochimica et biophysica acta    April 1, 1952   Volume 8, Issue 4 450-458 doi: 10.1016/0006-3002(52)90071-1
ROVERY M, DESNUELLE P.No abstract available
The action of acid phosphate on the anion permeability of horse erythrocytes.
The Biochemical journal    June 1, 1951   Volume 49, Issue 1 xix 
HOLTON FA.In 1941, Keilin & Mann described an optical method of studying the penetration of erythrocytes by bicarbonate ions and the intracellular activity of carbonic anhydrase. This method consists of converting the haemoglobin inside the cell to methaemoglobin and observing the transformation of the methaemoglobin from the acid to the alkaline form by the entering bicarbonate ions. During this work they noticed that this transformation did not occur if the methaemoglobin cells had been washed in acid phosphate and interpreted this as an effect on the permeability of the cells. Similar observations by...
The esterases of horse blood; the specificity of horse plasma cholinesterase and ali-esterase.
The Biochemical journal    November 1, 1950   Volume 47, Issue 5 518-525 doi: 10.1042/bj0470518
STURGE LM, WHITTAKER VP.The research article delves into the exploration of the specificity of esterases in horse blood, particularly plasma cholinesterase and the ali-esterase, drawing a clear distinction between the two, which had […]
Occurrence of tyrosinase in horse and fish melanomas.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    November 1, 1950   Volume 75, Issue 2 394-398 doi: 10.3181/00379727-75-18210
FITZPATRICK TB, LERNER AB, CALKINS E, SUMMERSON WH.No abstract available
The esterases of horse blood; the specificity of horse erythrocyte cholinesterase.
The Biochemical journal    November 1, 1950   Volume 47, Issue 5 525-530 doi: 10.1042/bj0470525
MOUNTER LA, WHITTAKER VP.No abstract available
[Double refraction of egression of alkaline solutions of horse serum albumin. Study of the mechanism of hydrolysis].
Bulletin de la Societe de chimie biologique    January 1, 1950   Volume 32, Issue 1-2 123-129 
BARBU E, JOLY M.No abstract available
Catalase from horse kidney and human liver.
Acta chemica Scandinavica    January 1, 1947   Volume 1, Issue 1 114-117 doi: 10.3891/acta.chem.scand.01-0114
BONNICHSEN RK.No abstract available
A comparative study of the blood and liver catalases from the horse.
Archives of biochemistry    January 1, 1947   Volume 12, Issue 1 83-94 
BONNICHSEN RK.No abstract available
Horse brain thromboplastin; effect of various factors on activity of horse brain extracts. KAZAL LA, HIGASHI A, ARNOW LE.No abstract available
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