Analyze Diet

Topic:Evolutionary Biology

Evolutionary biology and horses focus on the study of the evolutionary processes that have shaped the development, adaptation, and diversification of the Equus genus. This field examines the genetic, morphological, and ecological changes that have occurred over millions of years, leading to the modern horse. Researchers explore the transition from small, multi-toed ancestors to the large, single-toed horses of today, analyzing fossil records, genetic data, and environmental factors that influenced these changes. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the evolutionary history, genetic adaptations, and ecological interactions of horses, providing insights into their development and survival strategies throughout history.
Contribution to the history of the horse domestication and breeding in the Ukraine.
Historia medicinae veterinariae    July 4, 2003   Volume 28, Issue 2 41-46 
Rudik SK.The Ukraine is one of the centers of domestication of animals. Many archaeological excavations and chronicles evidence this. The wild horse tarpan was domesticated in Ukraine. There were huge herds of tarpans lived in Ukraine. Tarpans were distinguished for their speed, quality of their hooves (it was very important for the shoeless horses). The last tarpan mare was killed at Ukrainian territory at 1898. In contradistinction to the Eq. Prezewalskii the tarpan was the direct ancestor of the European domesticated horse breeds.
MultiPipMaker and supporting tools: Alignments and analysis of multiple genomic DNA sequences.
Nucleic acids research    June 26, 2003   Volume 31, Issue 13 3518-3524 doi: 10.1093/nar/gkg579
Schwartz S, Elnitski L, Li M, Weirauch M, Riemer C, Smit A, Green ED, Hardison RC, Miller W.Analysis of multiple sequence alignments can generate important, testable hypotheses about the phylogenetic history and cellular function of genomic sequences. We describe the MultiPipMaker server, which aligns multiple, long genomic DNA sequences quickly and with good sensitivity (available at http://bio.cse.psu.edu/ since May 2001). Alignments are computed between a contiguous reference sequence and one or more secondary sequences, which can be finished or draft sequence. The outputs include a stacked set of percent identity plots, called a MultiPip, comparing the reference sequence with sub...
Genetic relationship between Mongolian and Norwegian horses?
Animal genetics    February 13, 2003   Volume 34, Issue 1 55-58 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2003.00922.x
Bjørnstad G, Nilsen NØ, Røed KH.Human populations of Central Asian origin have contributed genetic material to northern European populations. It is likely that migrating humans carried livestock to ensure food and ease transportation. Thus, eastern genes could also have dispersed to northern European livestock populations. Using microsatellite data, we here report that the essentially different genetic distances DA and (deltamu)2 and their corresponding phylogenetic trees show close associations between the Mongolian native horse and northern European horse breeds. The genetic distances between the northern European breeds a...
Dental care in the older horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 9, 2003   Volume 18, Issue 3 509-522 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(02)00031-7
Graham BP.Dental care in any horse need not be looked at as the difficult challenge it used to be before the days of sedation and tungsten carbide and diamond cutting wheels. Horses are living longer and more comfortable lives thanks, in part, to the advancements of dental care and special dietary rations. With the evolution of the horse's place in family circles today, people want the best care possible for their animals. Dentistry has become an important part of that care.
Genetic characterization of horse bone excavated from the Kwakji archaeological site, Jeju, Korea.
Molecules and cells    November 22, 2002   Volume 14, Issue 2 224-230 
Jung YH, Han SH, Shin T, Oh MY.We determined the nucleotide sequences of the hypervariable D-loop region of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from horse bone (humerus, A.D. 700 to A.D. 800) that was excavated from the Kwakji archaeological site, Jeju, Korea. We compared them with ones from extant horses. We designed three pairs of oligonucleotide primers from the tRNA-Thr and tRNA-Phe gene regions of mtDNA that are highly conserved among many other animal species. We cloned 232, 336, and 644 bp from the horse bone in order to determine the mtDNA D-loop sequence. The sequence was 1,124 bp long; the middle contained 19 tandem repeats...
Comparative mapping in equids: the asine X chromosome is rearranged compared to horse and Hartmann’s mountain zebra.
Cytogenetic and genome research    November 20, 2002   Volume 96, Issue 1-4 206-209 doi: 10.1159/000063050
Raudsepp T, Lear TL, Chowdhary BP.The X chromosomes of the extant equids, in general, share morphology and banding pattern similarities. However, the donkey X is, in part, an exception because of significantly different centromeric index and variant banding patterns in the pericentromeric region. To verify the underlying molecular basis of this difference, twelve equine BAC clones were FISH mapped to donkey (EAS) and Hartmann's mountain zebra (EZH) metaphase spreads. Loci from the terminal region of Xp and distal to terminal regions of the Xq showed the same order and relative position in all three species, implying cross-spec...
Stabilization of protein by replacement of a fluctuating loop: structural analysis of a chimera of bovine alpha-lactalbumin and equine lysozyme.
Biochemistry    November 13, 2002   Volume 41, Issue 46 13807-13813 doi: 10.1021/bi020360u
Tada M, Kobashigawa Y, Mizuguchi M, Miura K, Kouno T, Kumaki Y, Demura M, Nitta K, Kawano K.Equine lysozyme is a calcium-binding lysozyme and an evolutional intermediate between non-calcium binding c-type lysozyme and alpha-lactalbumin. We constructed a chimeric protein by substituting the fluctuating loop of bovine alpha-lactalbumin with the D-helix of equine lysozyme. The substitution affects the protection factors not only in the fluctuating loop but also in the antiparallel beta-sheet, the A- and B-helices, and the loop between the B-helix and the beta-sheet. Amide protons in these regions of the chimera are more protected from exchange than are those of bovine alpha-lactalbumin....
History of Lipizzan horse maternal lines as revealed by mtDNA analysis.
Genetics, selection, evolution : GSE    November 13, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 5 635-648 doi: 10.1186/1297-9686-34-5-635
Kavar T, Brem G, Habe F, Sölkner J, Dovc P.Sequencing of the mtDNA control region (385 or 695 bp) of 212 Lipizzans from eight studs revealed 37 haplotypes. Distribution of haplotypes among studs was biased, including many private haplotypes but only one haplotype was present in all the studs. According to historical data, numerous Lipizzan maternal lines originating from founder mares of different breeds have been established during the breed's history, so the broad genetic base of the Lipizzan maternal lines was expected. A comparison of Lipizzan sequences with 136 sequences of domestic- and wild-horses from GenBank showed a clusterin...
Equine infectious anemia virus envelope evolution in vivo during persistent infection progressively increases resistance to in vitro serum antibody neutralization as a dominant phenotype.
Journal of virology    October 9, 2002   Volume 76, Issue 21 10588-10597 doi: 10.1128/jvi.76.21.10588-10597.2002
Howe L, Leroux C, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC.Equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) infection of horses is characterized by well-defined waves of viremia associated with the sequential evolution of distinct viral populations displaying extensive envelope gp90 variation; however, a correlation of in vivo envelope evolution with in vitro serum neutralization phenotype remains undefined. Therefore, the goal of the present study was to utilize a previously defined panel of natural variant EIAV envelope isolates from sequential febrile episodes to characterize the effects of envelope variation during persistent infection on viral neutralizatio...
Phylogenetic relationships of Argentinean Creole horses and other South American and Spanish breeds inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences.
Animal genetics    October 2, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 5 356-363 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00884.x
Mirol PM, Peral García P, Vega-Pla JL, Dulout FN.South American horses constitute a direct remnant of the Iberian horses brought to the New World by the Spanish conquerors. The source of the original horses was Spain, and it is generally assumed that the animals belonged to the Andalusian, Spanish Celtic, Barb or Arabian breeds. In order to establish the relationship between Argentinean and Spanish horses, a portion of the mitochondrial D-loop of 104 animals belonging to nine South American and Spanish breeds was analysed using SSCP and DNA sequencing. The variability found both within and between breeds was very high. There were 61 polymorp...
Greater genetic variability in Argentine Creole than in Thoroughbred horses based on serum protein polymorphisms.
Genetics and molecular research : GMR    September 30, 2002   Volume 1, Issue 3 261-265 
Díaz S, Dulout FN, Peral-García P.Genetic polymorphism was analyzed for five blood proteins: albumin - Al, esterase - Es, alpha(1)B-glycoprotein - Xk, transferrin - Tf and hemoglobin - Hb in 200 Thoroughbred (TB) and 124 Argentine Creole (AC) horses. Of the five systems examined, Tf and Hb were not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in either breed and Es was not in equilibrium in the Creole breed. Genetic variability, estimated as average heterozygosity, was higher in AC (H = 0.585 +/- 0.131) than in TB (H = 0.353 +/- 0.065). The genetic differentiation between these two populations (F(ST)) was 0.109. Thus, of the total genetic di...
Protamine P1 sequences in equids: comparison with even-toed animals.
Theriogenology    September 6, 2002   Volume 58, Issue 5 1007-1015 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)00940-8
Pirhonen A, Linnala-Kankkunen A, Kenney RM, Mäenpää PH.Protamine P1 amino acid sequences were determined from semen samples of the Przewalski horse, donkey, Somali wild ass, Grevy's zebra, and Grant's zebra (odd-toed perissodactyls), and compared with those of the domestic horse. Although the rate of amino acid variation of protamine P1 is known to be among the most rapidly diverging polypeptides, the equid sequences revealed only little variation. The sequence from the Przewalski horse was identical with that from the domestic horse. The other sequences differed from the corresponding sequences of the domestic and Przewalski horses in two positio...
[From wild horse to riding horse].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    August 15, 2002   Volume 144, Issue 7 323-329 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.144.7.323
Isenbügel E.Over 45 million years of evolution the horse developed to a highly specialized animal in anatomy, physiology and behavior. No other animal had influenced the economic and cultural history of men to such extent. Hunting prey since the ice age, domesticated 4000 B.C. and used for thousands of years as unique animal all over the world has attained a new role today as partner in sport, as companion animal and even as cotherapeutic. The well known behavioral demands in use and keeping are still often not fulfilled.
Computer simulations to determine the efficacy of different genome resource banking strategies for maintaining genetic diversity.
Cryobiology    August 2, 2002   Volume 44, Issue 2 122-131 doi: 10.1016/s0011-2240(02)00013-5
Harnal VK, Wildt DE, Bird DM, Monfort SL, Ballou JD.Genome resource banks (GRBs) and assisted reproductive techniques are increasingly recognized as useful tools for the management and conservation of biodiversity, including endangered species. Cryotechnology permits long-term storage of valuable genetic material. Although, the actual application to endangered species management requires technical knowledge about sperm freezing and thawing, a systematic understanding of the quantitative impacts of various germ plasm storage and use scenarios is also mandatory. In this study, various GRB strategies were analyzed using the historical data from th...
History and integrity of thoroughbred dam lines revealed in equine mtDNA variation.
Animal genetics    July 26, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 4 287-294 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00870.x
Hill EW, Bradley DG, Al-Barody M, Ertugrul O, Splan RK, Zakharov I, Cunningham EP.Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) D-loop sequences (381 bp) from 100 thoroughbreds in 19 of the most common matrilineal female families were used to reconstruct a founder female population for the thoroughbred ( approximately 1650-1750 AD). Seventeen haplotypes were found to have contributed to the 19 female lineages. In order to place the reconstructed founder population in wider historical context, we examined, using both single strand conformation polymorphism and direct sequence analysis, variation in a 343 bp mtDNA fragment in that population and 13 other horse populations of disparate provenance...
Mitochondrial DNA and the origins of the domestic horse.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    July 18, 2002   Volume 99, Issue 16 10905-10910 doi: 10.1073/pnas.152330099
Jansen T, Forster P, Levine MA, Oelke H, Hurles M, Renfrew C, Weber J, Olek K.The place and date of the domestication of the horse has long been a matter for debate among archaeologists. To determine whether horses were domesticated from one or several ancestral horse populations, we sequenced the mitochondrial D-loop for 318 horses from 25 oriental and European breeds, including American mustangs. Adding these sequences to previously published data, the total comes to 652, the largest currently available database. From these sequences, a phylogenetic network was constructed that showed that most of the 93 different mitochondrial (mt)DNA types grouped into 17 distinct p...
Evolution of the six horse IGHG genes and corresponding immunoglobulin gamma heavy chains.
Immunogenetics    July 4, 2002   Volume 54, Issue 5 353-364 doi: 10.1007/s00251-002-0458-4
Wagner B, Greiser-Wilke I, Wege AK, Radbruch A, Leibold W.It is generally assumed that the different mammalian IgG isotypes have developed during evolution by duplications of a common ancestor gamma heavy chain constant region gene (IGHG). In contrast to other species studied so far, which express between one and four IGHG genes, the horse (Equus caballus) genome contains six IGHG genes, and it has been postulated that they all can be expressed. For determination of the evolutionary history of the six horse IGHG genes, genomic DNA and cDNA of the IGHG genes were sequenced. The structure of these genes with reference to exons and introns was determine...
Comparative FISH mapping of 32 loci reveals new homologous regions between donkey and horse karyotypes.
Cytogenetics and cell genetics    February 22, 2002   Volume 94, Issue 3-4 180-185 doi: 10.1159/000048812
Raudsepp T, Mariat D, Guérin G, Chowdhary BP.A total of 32 loci comprising specific genes, microsatellites and anonymous BAC clones from horse and cattle were mapped on donkey chromosomes. Of these, 13 markers were also mapped for the first time in the horse. This information, together with that previously available in donkey and horse updates the comparative status of the karyotypes of the two species. The findings of the present study for the first time show correlation between eleven equine acrocentric autosomes and the donkey chromosomes and in part enable detection of rearrangements between them. There are still 7-8 pairs of chromos...
[The origin and function of the enamel cup, infundibulum dentis, on the incisors of the horse].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    February 14, 2002   Volume 31, Issue 1 53-59 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.2002.00354.x
Vollmerhaus B, Roos H, Knospe C.The enamel cups of equids originated phylogenetically through several phases in Oligocene and Miocene horses, which readjusted from hard to soft leaf food and from double nutrition (leaves and grass) to a pure grass intake. This has been proved experimentally. The resulting construction of the incisor is continually changed on its occlusal surface by erosion according to the pattern of the enamel crests. Referring to the whole incisor tooth, this results in an equid life cycle in which the good grip of the occlusal surface and the efficiency of ingestion favours the young, sexually mature hors...
Correspondence of human chromosomes 9, 12, 15, 16, 19 and 20 with donkey chromosomes refines homology between horse and donkey karyotypes.
Chromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology    January 10, 2002   Volume 9, Issue 8 623-629 doi: 10.1023/a:1012948122600
Raudsepp T, Chowdhary BP.Whole chromosome paints for human (HSA) chromosomes 9, 12, 15 and 20 and arm-specific paints for HSA16p, 19p and 19q were applied on donkey metaphase spreads. All probes, except HSA19p, gave distinct hybridization signals on donkey chromosomes/chromosomal segments. The results show direct segmental homology between human and donkey genomes, and enable refinement of correspondence between donkey and horse karyotypes. Of specific interest is the identification of hitherto unknown correspondence between four equine acrocentric chromosomes (ECA22, 23, 25 and 28) and the donkey chromosomes. Overall...
Molecular epidemiology and evolution of equine arteritis virus.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology    January 5, 2002   Volume 494 19-24 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4615-1325-4_2
Balasuriya UB, Hedges JF, MacLachlan NJ.No abstract available
[Analysis of the genetic structure of the breeding nucleus of the Russian population of purebred Thoroughbred horses at the Extension locus using molecular DNA typing].
Genetika    January 5, 2002   Volume 37, Issue 10 1383-1387 
Kniazev SP, Reissmann M, Wagner HJ, Kuraĭ MV, Samovolov NV.Results of the first in Russia survey of the gene pool of the breeding nucleus of the Russian population of thoroughbred horses by means of PCR analysis of the E (Extension) locus MC1R gene mutations are presented. The data on the structure of breeding populations from the leading stud farms Voskhod and Oros with regard to color phenotypes as well as genotype and allele frequencies are presented. The population structure parameters are discussed with respect to possible specific features of microevolution processes.
From horses to humans: species crossovers in the origin of modern sports training.
Sport history review    January 1, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 2 95-120 doi: 10.1123/shr.33.2.95
Mewett PG.No abstract available
Microsatellite diversity, pedigree relatedness and the contributions of founder lineages to thoroughbred horses.
Animal genetics    December 12, 2001   Volume 32, Issue 6 360-364 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2001.00785.x
Cunningham EP, Dooley JJ, Splan RK, Bradley DG.The thoroughbred (TB) horse is one of the oldest breeds of domestic animals, with pedigree records spanning three centuries. Because the population is essentially closed, there is concern about loss of genetic variation. Here we report two parallel analyses. In the first, genetic variation in the current population is measured using data from 13 microsatellite loci in 211 horses with relationships calculated based on allele sharing. In the second analysis, pedigree information is used to calculate genetic relationships between animals based on shared ancestry. These two measures of relationshi...
Genetic variation in the feral horses of the Namib Desert, Namibia.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    September 21, 2001   Volume 72, Issue 1 18-22 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v72i1.603
Cothran EG, van Dyk E, van der Merwe FJ.Genetic variation at 7 blood-group and 10 biochemical genetic loci was examined in 30 horses from a feral herd from the Namib Desert of Namibia, Africa. The observed genetic variability was extremely low compared with that found in domestic horse breeds. The low variation was most probably a result of recent small population size and a small founding population size. Genetic comparison of the Namib horses, which were of unknown origins, to domestic horse breeds, showed that the Namib horses had the highest genetic similarity to Arabian type horses, although they did not closely resemble this t...
[The phylogenesis of equine teeth].
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    September 6, 2001   Volume 30, Issue 4 237-248 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0264.2001.00328.x
Vollmerhaus B, Knospe C, Roos H.Phylogenetic research on the teeth of equidae beginning with dagger Hyracotherium ('Eohippus') will be summarized, subdivided into its components, analysed in a new way and finally interpreted according to several theories of evolution. In this context, specific cells (ameloblasts, odontoblasts, cementoblasts) are discussed and valued according to Preuss (1987) as active carriers of the evolution of teeth.
Chromosome homologies between man and mountain zebra (Equus zebra hartmannae) and description of a new ancestral synteny involving sequences homologous to human chromosomes 4 and 8.
Cytogenetics and cell genetics    August 31, 2001   Volume 93, Issue 3-4 291-296 doi: 10.1159/000057000
Richard F, Messaoudi C, Lombard M, Dutrillaux B.Using human chromosome painting probes, we looked for homologies between human and mountain zebra (Equus zebra hartmannae, Equidae, Perissodactyla) karyotypes. Except for two very short segments, all euchromatic regions were found to have a human homologous chromosome segment. Conserved syntenies previously described in various mammalian orders were detected. Each synteny corresponded to a chromosomal region homologous to two parts of human chromosomes: HSA3 and HSA21, HSA7 and HSA16, HSA12 and HSA22, and HSA16 and HSA19. Chromosomal segments homologous to a part of HSA11 and HSA19p are found ...
Chromosomal distribution of the telomere sequence (TTAGGG)(n) in the Equidae.
Cytogenetics and cell genetics    July 28, 2001   Volume 93, Issue 1-2 127-130 doi: 10.1159/000056964
Lear TL.Telomeres are a class of repetitive DNA sequences that are located at chromosome termini and that act to stabilize the chromosome ends. The rapid karyotypic evolution of the genus Equus has given rise to ten taxa, all with different diploid chromosome numbers. Using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) we localized the mammalian telomere sequence, (TTAGGG)(n), to the chromosomes of nine equid taxa. TTAGGG signal was located at chromosome termini in all species, however additional signal was seen at interstitial sites on some chromosomes in the Burchell's zebra, Equus quagga burchelli, the...
Separating zebras from horses.
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice    April 21, 2001   Volume 14, Issue 2 162 
Gordon SF.No abstract available
Investigating the origins of horse domestication.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 21, 2001   Issue 28 6-14 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05149.x
Levine MA.Before the development of firearms, the horse was crucial to warfare and, before the invention of the steam engine, it was the fastest and most reliable form of land transport. It is crucial to the life of nomadic pastoralists on the Eurasian steppe and played a major role in the evolution of human society during the Bronze Age and Iron Age. Understanding the human past requires knowledge of the origins and development of horse husbandry. The problem of being able to identify the early stages of horse domestication is one that many researchers have grappled with for the most part unsuccessfull...
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