Analyze Diet

Topic:Genetics

Genetics in horses encompasses the study of hereditary traits and the genetic makeup that influences various characteristics and health conditions in equine populations. This field involves the analysis of genes and their functions, inheritance patterns, and the impact of genetic variations on traits such as coat color, performance ability, and susceptibility to diseases. Research in equine genetics employs techniques such as genome mapping, sequencing, and genetic testing to identify specific genes and mutations associated with these traits. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the genetic basis of equine traits, the methodologies used in genetic research, and the implications for breeding, health management, and conservation of horse breeds.
Serum lipid-associated sialic acid values in horses with neoplasms.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 10 1829-1830 
Kloppel TM, Richardson RC, Traver DS, Morré DJ.No abstract available
Bacteriological and serological studies of haemophilus equigenitalis, agent of contagious equine metritis.
Journal of clinical microbiology    October 1, 1981   Volume 14, Issue 4 355-360 doi: 10.1128/jcm.14.4.355-360.1981
Tainturier DJ, Delmas CF, Dabernat HJ.Seventeen strains of haemophilus equigenitalis isolated from the cervix, clitoris, and urethra of mares were biochemically characterized with the API 10E and APIZYM test kit systems, conventional biochemical tests, and the porphyrin test. Antisera were prepared in rabbits. All of the strains were positive to the porphyrin test, and the requirement for factor X (hemin) or V (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) was not shown. Catalase, oxidase, phosphatase, and phosphoamidase tests were positive with all of the strains. Aminopeptidase (arylamidase) activity has been detected on beta-naphthylamide...
Nucleolus organizer regions in the chromosomes of the domestic horse.
The Journal of heredity    September 1, 1981   Volume 72, Issue 5 357-358 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a109525
Kopp E, Mayr B, Czaker R, Schleger W.No abstract available
Immunochemical and biological properties of horse parathyroid hormone.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    September 1, 1981   Volume 167, Issue 4 542-546 doi: 10.3181/00379727-167-41211
Raulais D, Desplan C, Monet JD, Boccard B, Milhaud GU.No abstract available
Hereditary multiple exostoses. Hereditary multiple exostoses in horses.
The American journal of pathology    September 1, 1981   Volume 104, Issue 3 285-288 
Shupe JL, Leone NC, Gardner EJ, Olson AE.No abstract available
beta-Endorphin: isolation, amino acid sequence and synthesis of the hormone from horse pituitary glands.
International journal of peptide and protein research    September 1, 1981   Volume 18, Issue 3 242-248 doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3011.1981.tb02978.x
Li CH, Ng TB, Yamashiro D, Chung D, Hammonds RG, Tseng LF.Beta-endorphin has been isolated from equine pituitaries. Its amino acid sequence is identical to that of ovine, bovine and camel beta-endorphins except for substitution of the threonine residue at position 6 by serine. The equine beta-endorphin has also been synthesized by the solid-phase method. In comparison with the human hormone, equine beta-endorphin was shown to possess 3 times the receptor-binding activity in rat membrane preparations and 1.6 times the analgesic potency in the mouse tail-flick assay.
A high incidence of congenital angular limb deformities in a group of foals.
The Veterinary record    August 1, 1981   Volume 109, Issue 5 93-94 doi: 10.1136/vr.109.5.93
Mason TA.No abstract available
Amino acid sequence of horse spleen apoferritin.
FEBS letters    July 6, 1981   Volume 129, Issue 2 322-327 doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(81)80193-7
Heusterspreute M, Crichton RR.No abstract available
The mammalian fetal membranes.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    July 1, 1981   Volume 62, Issue 2 321-335 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0620321
Perry JS.No abstract available
Some nutritional problems of horses.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 3 183-186 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb03480.x
Hintz HF, Kallfelz FA.The effects of overfeeding, calcium-phosphorus imbalance, misuse of supplements and false advertising on equine nutrition are discussed. Overfeeding is known to cause disorders in several species but, although a similar relationship has been suggested on clinical evidence, no controlled trials on horses have been reported. It has also been suggested that overfeeding is a problem only for those horses with a genetic predisposition to skeletal problems. The importance of adequate calcium and phosphorus levels has been known for many years but severe cases of calcium deficiency still occur. Clien...
Amino acid sequence of horse colipase B.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    June 29, 1981   Volume 669, Issue 1 39-45 doi: 10.1016/0005-2795(81)90221-x
Bonicel J, Couchoud P, Foglizzo E, Desnuelle P, Chapus C.The complete sequence of the 96 residues composing horse colipase B has been determined by automated analysis of the intact protein, of two CNBr peptides and two tryptic peptides arising, respectively, from the citraconylated chain and from the unreduced protein. The single histidine of the protein is located at position 29 as in horse colipase A. His86, present in the C-terminal region of the pig cofactor and supposed to play a role in the folding molecule, is not conserved in horse B. Large pieces of the pig and horse B chains were found to be identical or very similar, especially the N-term...
Nucleic acid-protein interactions. Degradation of double-stranded RNA by glycosylated ribonucleases.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    June 26, 1981   Volume 654, Issue 1 77-85 doi: 10.1016/0005-2787(81)90138-6
Carsana A, Furia A, Gallo A, Beintema JJ, Libonati M.1. Extensively glycosylated ribonucleases, like the enzymes from pig and horse pancreas, show a much higher activity on double-stranded RNAs than similarly charged, carbohydrate-free RNAases under stranded assay conditions (relatively high salt concentrations). Glycosylated pig and horse pancreas RNAases also show a larger destabilizing effect on double-stranded poly[d(A-T)] X poly[d(A-T)], than that displayed by bovine RNAase A under these conditions. Both activities show a similar dependence on the ionic strength of the medium. 2. A partial enzymic removal of the heterosaccharide side chains...
Effects of daily administration of estradiol-17 beta on follicular growth, ovulation, and plasma hormones in mares.
Biology of reproduction    June 1, 1981   Volume 24, Issue 5 1026-1031 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod24.5.1026
Burns PJ, Douglas RH.No abstract available
Relationship of sialic acid residues to in vitro biological and immunological activities of equine gonadotropins.
Biology of reproduction    June 1, 1981   Volume 24, Issue 5 1082-1087 
Aggarwal BB, Papkoff H.No abstract available
Effect of excessive exposure to sodium fluoride on composition and crystallinity of equine bone tumors.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 6 1040-1042 
Shupe JL, Eanes ED, Leone NC.Sodium fluoride (5 mg/kg of body weight) was fed for 20 months to horses with hereditary multiple exostoses (HME), a skeletal disorder that primarily affects endochondral bones during skeletal development. Rib biopsies were performed on both HME horses not fed fluoride (control) and HME horses that were fed fluoride to obtain comparable specimens for chemical analyses and x-ray diffraction. Fluoride content of the rib from a horse fed fluoride for 20 months was approximately 20 to 30 times higher than that from a control horse. Fluoride content of the bone tumors was higher than those of norma...
A possible vitamin E-responsive condition in adult horses.
New Zealand veterinary journal    May 1, 1981   Volume 29, Issue 5 83-84 doi: 10.1080/00480169.1981.34807
Dewes HF.No abstract available
Myosin types in equine skeletal muscle fibres.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1981   Volume 30, Issue 3 381-382 
Snow DH, Billeter R, Jenny E.No abstract available
[Evaluation of variability of duration of pregnancy in mares].
Veterinarni medicina    May 1, 1981   Volume 26, Issue 5 297-304 
Dusek J, Munk Z.In a set of mares of English Thoroughbred horse of the Napajedla stock the gravidity length in the time period from 1880 to 1972 was evaluated. The variability of the gravidity length was evaluated in sets which were put together by combination of two age groups with a division of the studied time period into ten-year stages. Variance and sample means of the gravidity lengths in these sub-groups are significantly different in the period under study. In order to eliminate the action of non-genetic influences qualifying the variability of the gravidity length, and to increase the objectivity of ...
Age-related changes in the Leydig cell population, seminiferous tubules, and sperm production in stallions.
Biology of reproduction    April 1, 1981   Volume 24, Issue 3 703-712 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod24.3.703
Johnson L, Neaves WB.No abstract available
Isolation of cellulolytic phycomycete fungi from the caecum of the horse.
Journal of general microbiology    April 1, 1981   Volume 123, Issue 2 287-296 doi: 10.1099/00221287-123-2-287
Orpin CG.Microscopic examination of horse caecum contents revealed vegetative growth of phycomycete fungi on particles of digesta, and uniflagellated cells similar to fungal zoospores in the liquid phase. Three morphologically distinct isolates of strictly anaerobic phycomycete fungi were obtained from the caecum contents and cultured in vitro. Two of the isolates were able to utilize a wide range of plant carbohydrates for growth, including alpha-cellulose, xylan and particulate starch, and extensively digested water-insoluble plant tissues.
Damnosa hereditas.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 2 78-79 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb04115.x
No abstract available
Two equine true hermaphrodites with 64,XX/64,XY and 63,XO/64,XY chimerism.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1981   Volume 71, Issue 2 123-135 
Dunn HO, Smiley D, Duncan JR, McEntee K.The karyotypes of a Welsh pony and a Standardbred were 64,XX/64,XY and 63,XO/64,XY respectively. Both intersexes were true hermaphrodites with bilateral ovotestes. Neither intersex showed stallion-like behaviour. Each one had an underdeveloped penis, bilateral seminal vesicles and uterine tissue. It would appear that the chimerism in these equine intersexes resulted from double fertilization or fusion of blastocysts. Mosaicism in the Standardbred is a possibility, resulting from loss of a Y chromosome by anaphase lag in an early embryonic XY cell.
Major histocompatibility locus in the Arabian horse.
Transplantation    April 1, 1981   Volume 31, Issue 4 290-294 doi: 10.1097/00007890-198104000-00011
Mottironi VD, Perryman LE, Pollara B, Mickey MR, Swift R, McGrath P.Combined immunodeficiency disease (CID) is a genetic disorder of T and B lymphocyte production which results in a nonfunctional immune system. It is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait and has been reported in humans and in horses of the Arabian breed. Arabian horses known to have the CID gene and horses of unknown carrier status were tested using a microlymphocytotoxicity technique. Computer chi 2 analysis distinguished six serologically defined specificities. The study of unrelated horses and a limited number of families showed that the specificities behave as codominant alleles segreg...
An evaluation of contribution derived from investigations of equine immunodeficiencies.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    April 1, 1981   Volume 2, Issue 2 101-109 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(81)90042-8
McGuire TC, Perryman LE, Banks KL.Following the descriptions of immunodeficiencies in horses beginning in 1973, there has been considerable effort to develop methods for differential diagnosis and to determine the cause and prevalence of the disorders. In addition, the equine immunodeficiencies, especially combined immunodeficiency, have been studied from a comparative viewpoint with the goal of finding information applicable to similar diseases of children. Coincident with the development of knowledge about the immunodeficiencies per se, considerable information about several aspects of immunology has been obtained. It is the...
Perspectives in perissodactyls.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 2 85-87 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb04118.x
Rowlands IW.The world-wide foaling rate in the mare is low and in the Hannoverian breed has remained asymptotic at about 50 per cent for over 150 years. In an attempt to discover some of the possible reasons for this low fertility rate, the evolutionary history of the perissodactyls, the odd-toed ungulates, is reviewed here. Of the 156 genera of this order, 152 are in the fossil record; this gives them the highest extermination rate of all the mammal groups. Some of the unusual and unique features of the reproductive physiology of the mare and their possible association with low fertility are considered.
The histidine residues in pig and horse colipases.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications    March 16, 1981   Volume 99, Issue 1 114-119 doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(81)91720-4
Granon S, Rahmani-Jourdheuil D, Desnuelle P, Chapus C.No abstract available
Stabilization of the C-terminal part of pig and horse colipase by carboxypeptidase and trypsin inhibitors.
European journal of biochemistry    March 16, 1981   Volume 115, Issue 1 99-105 doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1981.tb06203.x
Chapus C, Desnuelle P, Foglizzo E.Pig and horse colipases have been purified by a common procedure using trypsin and carboxypeptidase inhibitors as stabilizers. Two forms of pig colipase were identified: a predominant A1 form with about 103-105 residues, and a minor slightly degraded A2 form in which the last two C-terminal residues, Asp and Ser, were lacking. This type of degradation is considerably slowed down by carboxypeptidase inhibitors. A total of four forms of the horse cofactor were characterized: two (A1 and B1) were probably isocolipases which differed by only a few substitutions. Both contained the same number of r...
[Differentiation of beta-hemolytic streptococci isolated from genital organs and fetuses of horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 15, 1981   Volume 94, Issue 6 101-103 
Hawari AD, Sonnenschein B.No abstract available
Differentiation of sub-types of equine herpesvirus I by restriction endonuclease analysis.
Australian veterinary journal    March 1, 1981   Volume 57, Issue 3 148-149 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1981.tb00495.x
Sabine M, Robertson GR, Whalley JM.No abstract available
A cytochemical study of nuclear changes in boar, bull, goat, mouse, rat, and stallion spermatids.
Journal of ultrastructure research    March 1, 1981   Volume 74, Issue 3 327-340 doi: 10.1016/s0022-5320(81)80124-4
Courtens JL, Loir M.No abstract available