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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.
Studies on blood and serum types of the Icelandic horses.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1966   Volume 7, Issue 3 206-225 doi: 10.1186/BF03547112
Hesselholt M.By means of isoimmunizations and heteroimmunizations 10 equine blood typing reagents were isolated. The specific antibodies were complete agglutinins, which were used in the direct agglutination test in saline medium. The reagents were designated A2, C, D, E, G, H, I, K, Da1, and Da2 reagent. Da1 and Da2 are preliminary designations. The data obtained from blood typing of a family material and a population material of Icelandic horses showed that the occurrence of each blood type factor is controlled by a single, dominant gene. The family data tended to show that the blood factors under invest...
[Blood group studies on the Bosnian mountain horse].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    January 1, 1966   Volume 13, Issue 1 74-77 
Schmid DO, Mancić D.No abstract available
Cerebellar hypoplasia and degeneration in a foal.
The Cornell veterinarian    January 1, 1966   Volume 56, Issue 1 17-24 
Dungworth DL, Fowler ME.No abstract available
[Biogenesis of unsaturated B-chain estrogens and of non-phenolic B-chain aromatic C-1-steroids in the horse].
Hoppe-Seyler's Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie    January 1, 1966   Volume 344, Issue 1 124-139 
Stárka L, Breuer H.No abstract available
[Study of some oligopeptides isolated from chymotrypsin hydrolysates of horse myoglobin globin].
Bulletin de la Societe de chimie biologique    January 1, 1966   Volume 48, Issue 5 733-735 
Boulanger Y, Dautrevaux M, Han KK, Biserte G.No abstract available
[Genetic aspect of the haptoglobins of several animal species (bovines, equines, swine)].
Archivio veterinario italiano    December 31, 1965   Volume 16, Issue 6 433-447 
Minoccheri F.No abstract available
Experimental transmission of Echinococcus from horses to foxes.
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology    December 1, 1965   Volume 59, Issue 4 457-462 doi: 10.1080/00034983.1965.11686332
Howkins AB, Gemmell MA, Smyth JD.No abstract available
[2 reports on horse cures of Andreas the Miller (circa 1500)].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1965   Volume 72, Issue 23 556-557 
Eis G.No abstract available
Equine research.
The British veterinary journal    November 1, 1965   Volume 121, Issue 11 495-496 
No abstract available
[Presence of rheumatoid factors in antibacterial horse immune sera].
Annales de l'Institut Pasteur    November 1, 1965   58-65 
Podliachouk L, Eyquem A, Corvazier R.No abstract available
[On the spondylarthrotic pathogenesis of the spinal ataxia of horses].
Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1965   Volume 72, Issue 21 502-506 
Schulz LC, Schebitz H, Pohlenz J, Mechlenburg G.No abstract available
Proteolysis of salmine by horse urinary kallikrein.
Biochemical pharmacology    November 1, 1965   Volume 14, Issue 11 1665-1671 doi: 10.1016/0006-2952(65)90021-3
Brandi CM, Mendes J, Paiva AC, Prado ES.No abstract available
Colicine K: VI. The Immune Response of Horses to a Colicinogenic Strain of Escherichia Coli.
The Journal of experimental medicine    October 31, 1965   Volume 122, Issue 5 891-903 doi: 10.1084/jem.122.5.891
Goebel WF, Staub AM.1. The immunization of horses with the colicinogenic bacillus E. coli K235 L + O(m) stimulates antibodies which precipitate and neutralize colicine K and neutralize the heterologous colicine I as well. 2. Unlike rabbits, horses evoke predpitating antibodies for the sialic acid-containing polysaccharide colominic acid.
Bioassay of pituitary gonadotropins.
Nature    September 11, 1965   Volume 207, Issue 5002 1198-1199 doi: 10.1038/2071198a0
Saxena BB.No abstract available
The action of cyanogen bromide on horse-heart cytochrome c and horse-heart myoglobin.
The Biochemical journal    September 1, 1965   Volume 96, Issue 3 693-699 doi: 10.1042/bj0960693
Black JA, Leaf G.1. The effects of cyanogen bromide on horse-heart cytochrome c and horse-heart myoglobin have been investigated. Cytochrome c yielded four fragments, of which two were haemopeptides. The two colourless peptides had amino acid compositions corresponding to those that are expected, on the basis of the sequence proposed for horse-heart cytochrome c by Margoliash, Smith, Kreil & Tuppy (1961), from cleavage at both methionine residues. Of the two haemopeptides, one was isolated and shown to be that derived from cleavage at only one methionine residue, that nearer to the C-terminus of the peptid...
5hydroxytryptamine in interstitial cells of foetal equine gonads.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    August 24, 1965   Volume 107, Issue 1 158-160 doi: 10.1016/0304-4165(65)90409-5
Pace E.No abstract available
Properties of horse serum gamma inhibitor.
Nature    July 24, 1965   Volume 207, Issue 995 381-383 doi: 10.1038/207381a0
Biddle F, Pepper DS, Belyavin G.No abstract available
An improved method for preparation of follicle stimulating and luteinizing hormones from horse pituitary glands.
Biochimica et biophysica acta    July 8, 1965   Volume 104, Issue 2 496-502 doi: 10.1016/0304-4165(65)90355-7
Saxena BB, Henneman PH.No abstract available
Some Physicochemical Characteristics of Equine Abortion Virus Nucleic Acid.
Virology    July 1, 1965   Volume 26 394-405 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(65)90003-6
SOEHNER RL, GENTRY GA, RANDALL CC.No abstract available
Paternity Tests in Horses.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1965   Volume 55 365-377 
STORMONT C, SUZUKI Y.WHEN a registered Thoroughbred mare in the United States is bred to two registered Thoroughbred stallions, the resulting foal can be registered only as the offspring of both stallions. This method of double registry has obvious disadvantages when it comes to keeping records of pedigrees. The Jockey Club, which is the registry organization for Thoroughbred horses in the United States, would like to keep the number of double-registered horses at a minimum. In that connection certain tests have now been developed in our laboratory which will permit exclusion of one of the two stallions in abou...
Isolation of a Newly Identified Equine Respiratory Virus.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1965   Volume 55 425-431 
WILSON JC, BRYANS JT, DOLL ER, TUDOR L.No abstract available
The Importance of the Gelding.
The Psychoanalytic quarterly    July 1, 1965   Volume 34 438-440 
LEWIS WC.No abstract available
Production of Adenovirus Antisera in Horses.
Public health reports (Washington, D.C. : 1896)    July 1, 1965   Volume 80, Issue 7 647-652 
LUCAS JB, JOHNSTON JG, KAYE HS, BUCCA MA, ROBINSON RQ.No abstract available
Sex-Linkage of Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase in the Horse and Donkey.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    June 18, 1965   Volume 148, Issue 3677 1603-1604 doi: 10.1126/science.148.3677.1603
TRUJILLO JM, WALDEN B, O'NEIL P, ANSTALL HB.Distinctly different electrophoretic patterns of red cell glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were resolved from the hemolyzates of horse and donkey erythrocytes. Examination of their reciprocal hybrids, mules and hinnies, showed that the red cells of female mules and female hinnies contain both horse and donkey G-6-PD; the male mule with an X chromosome from its horse mother contained pure horse G-6-PD, whereas the male hinny with the donkey X chromosome contained pure donkey G-6-PD. These findings on the male reciprocal hybrids suggest X-linkage.
[On hemoglobin polymorphism in the horse].
Zeitschrift fur Immunitatsforschung, Allergie und klinische Immunologie    June 1, 1965   Volume 128, Issue 5 499-503 
Schmid DO.No abstract available
An Abortion Due to Allescheria boydii and General Observations Concerning Mycotic Abortions of Mares.
The Veterinary record    May 8, 1965   Volume 77 541-545 
MAHAFFEY LW, ROSSDALE PD.No abstract available
Immunological and Electrophoretic Properties of Equine Luteinizing Hormone.
Journal of animal science    May 1, 1965   Volume 24 347-354 doi: 10.2527/jas1965.242347x
DESJARDINS C, HAFS JD.No abstract available
The Evolution of Hemoglobin.
Scientific American    May 1, 1965   Volume 212 110-118 doi: 10.1038/scientificamerican0565-110
ZUCKERKANDL E.No abstract available
CHROMOSOME COMPLEMENT: DIFFERENCES BETWEEN EQUUS CABALLUS AND EQUUS PRZEWALSKII, POLIAKOFF.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    April 16, 1965   Volume 148, Issue 3668 382-383 doi: 10.1126/science.148.3668.382
BENIRSCHKE K, MALOUF N, LOW RJ, HECK H.The chromosome number of the domestic horse is 2n = 64; different races have the same complement. The chromosomes of two Przewalski's horses (at Catskill Game Farm, New York), presumably ancestral wild horses from Mongolia, are identical: 2n = 66, with more acrocentric and fewer metacentric elements than the chromosomes of the domestic horse. This apparent difference in karyotype may help resolve the questions of "purity" in the relatively few remaining Przewalski's horses. Moreover, these findings are of interest in relation to the apparent fertility of hybrids between these species.
[Immunogenetic studies on English half-bred horses in Yugoslavia].
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    April 1, 1965   Volume 12, Issue 3 243-249 
Schmid DO, Mancić D.No abstract available