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Topic:Horse Breeds

Horse breeds represent the diverse genetic and phenotypic variations found within the species Equus ferus caballus. These breeds are categorized based on characteristics such as size, conformation, coat color, and temperament, which have been selectively bred over centuries to fulfill specific roles and functions. Common classifications of horse breeds include light horses, draft horses, and ponies, each serving different purposes ranging from riding and racing to work and companionship. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the genetics, history, and functional attributes of various horse breeds, as well as their impact on equine management and breeding practices.
Mitochondrial DNA: an important female contribution to thoroughbred racehorse performance.
Mitochondrion    March 3, 2006   Volume 6, Issue 2 53-63 doi: 10.1016/j.mito.2006.01.002
Harrison SP, Turrion-Gomez JL.The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecule, carrying genes encoding for respiratory chain enzymes, is a primary candidate for demonstrating associations between genotype and athletic performance in mammalian species. In humans, variation at seven protein encoding mitochondrial loci has been implicated in influencing fitness and performance characteristics. Although thoroughbred horses are selected for racing ability, there have not been any previous reported associations between genotypes and racecourse performance. The multi-factorial nature of the inheritance of racing ability is an obvious comp...
Glutathione content and glutathione peroxidase expression in in vivo and in vitro matured equine oocytes.
Molecular reproduction and development    February 24, 2006   Volume 73, Issue 5 658-666 doi: 10.1002/mrd.20469
Luciano AM, Goudet G, Perazzoli F, Lahuec C, Gérard N.The in vitro developmental competence of equine oocytes is still low in comparison with other domestic mammals. A major factor affecting the viability of cells during in vitro culture is the increased oxidative stress. Oxidative modifications could be responsible for oocyte incompetence for in vitro maturation (IVM). Cysteamine, a glutathione (GSH) synthesis enhancer, has been shown to increase intracellular GSH content and to improve embryo development when added during IVM of bovine, porcine, and ovine oocytes. The aim of the present study was (1) to determine whether equine cumulus-oocyte c...
Iberian origins of New World horse breeds.
The Journal of heredity    February 17, 2006   Volume 97, Issue 2 107-113 doi: 10.1093/jhered/esj020
Luís C, Bastos-Silveira C, Cothran EG, Oom Mdo M.Fossil records, archaeological proofs, and historical documents report that horses persisted continuously in the Iberian Peninsula since the Pleistocene and were taken to the American continent (New World) in the 15th century. To investigate the variation within the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region of Iberian and New World horse breeds, to analyze their relationships, and to test the historical origin of New World horses, a total of 153 samples, representing 30 Iberian and New World breeds, were analyzed by sequencing mtDNA control region fragments. Fifty-four haplotypes were found and...
Effect of maturation stage at cryopreservation on post-thaw cytoskeleton quality and fertilizability of equine oocytes.
Molecular reproduction and development    February 16, 2006   Volume 73, Issue 5 627-637 doi: 10.1002/mrd.20432
Tharasanit T, Colenbrander B, Stout TA.Oocyte cryopreservation is a potentially valuable technique for salvaging the germ-line when a valuable mare dies, but facilities for in vitro embryo production or oocyte transfer are not immediately available. This study examined the influence of maturation stage and freezing technique on the cryopreservability of equine oocytes. Cumulus oocyte complexes were frozen at the immature stage (GV) or after maturation in vitro for 30 hr (MII), using either conventional slow freezing (CF) or open pulled straw vitrification (OPS); cryoprotectant-exposed and untreated nonfrozen oocytes served as contr...
[Renaissance of equine dentistery, an abandoned discipline, which one tries to recover].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    February 1, 2006   Volume 148, Issue 1 23-30 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.148.1.23
Chuit P.The author illustrates by the study of ancient texts the interest shown for equine dentistry since the age of times. The first detailed studies on the technique go back to the 17th century. The 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries were fertile in instrumental as well as technical discoveries; it was the time of creativity, and he quotes authors like Günther father and son, Frick, Goubaux and Barrier, Mérllat, Cadiot, and Colyer with his enormous work on animal dentistry published in 1936. During and right after the 2nd World War, it is the time of desertion, with only one exception, ...
Genetic diversity among horse populations with a special focus on the Franches-Montagnes breed.
Animal genetics    January 31, 2006   Volume 37, Issue 1 33-39 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2005.01376.x
Glowatzki-Mullis ML, Muntwyler J, Pfister W, Marti E, Rieder S, Poncet PA, Gaillard C.Genetic characterization helps to assure breed integrity and to assign individuals to defined populations. The objective of this study was to characterize genetic diversity in six horse breeds and to analyse the population structure of the Franches-Montagnes breed, especially with regard to the degree of introgression with Warmblood. A total of 402 alleles from 50 microsatellite loci were used. The average number of alleles per locus was significantly lower in Thoroughbreds and Arabians. Average heterozygosities between breeds ranged from 0.61 to 0.72. The overall average of the coefficient of...
Nuclear status of immature and mature stallion spermatozoa.
Theriogenology    January 19, 2006   Volume 66, Issue 2 354-365 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.10.024
Dias GM, Retamal CA, Tobella L, Arnholdt AC, López ML.'The highly packed chromatin of mature spermatozoa results from replacement of somatic-like histones by highly basic arginine- and cysteine-rich protamines during spermatogenesis, with additional conformational changes in chromatin structure during epididymal transit. The objective of the present study was to compare the nuclear characteristics of immature and mature epididymal stallion spermatozoa, using a variety of experimental approaches. Resistance to in vitro decondensation of chromatin, following exposure to SDS-DTT and alkaline thioglycolate, increased significantly in mature spermatoz...
Determination of some enzymes and macro- and microelements in stallion seminal plasma and their correlations to semen quality.
Theriogenology    January 4, 2006   Volume 66, Issue 2 307-313 doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.11.015
Pesch S, Bergmann M, Bostedt H.Seminal plasma is very important for sperm metabolism as well as sperm function and survival and transport in the female genital tract. Analysis of enzyme activities and concentrations of elements can estimate integrity and function of sperm cell membranes. In man much data are available about biochemical analyses of seminal plasma. However, not many studies have been conducted in horses yet. We collected ejaculates from 72 stallions, measured the volume, obtained seminal plasma by centrifugation and examined spermatozoa with light microscopy for motility, concentration, for dead sperm and mor...
Genetic diversity and bottleneck studies in the Marwari horse breed.
Journal of genetics    December 31, 2005   Volume 84, Issue 3 295-301 doi: 10.1007/BF02715799
Gupta AK, Chauhan M, Tandon SN.Genetic diversity within the Marwari breed of horses was evaluated using 26 different microsatellite pairs with 48 DNA samples from unrelated horses. This molecular characterisation was undertaken to evaluate the problem of genetic bottlenecks also, if any, in this breed. The estimated mean (-/+ s.e.) allelic diversity was 5.9 (-/+ 2.24), with a total of 133 alleles. A high level of genetic variability within this breed was observed in terms of high values of mean (-/+ s.e.) effective number of alleles (3.3 -/+ 1.27), observed heterozygosity (0.5306 -/+ 0.22), expected Levene's heterozygosity ...
Prevalences and clinical signs of polysaccharide storage myopathy and shivers in Belgian draft horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 29, 2005   Volume 227, Issue 12 1958-1964 doi: 10.2460/javma.2005.227.1958
Firshman AM, Baird JD, Valberg SJ.To determine prevalences of polysaccharide storage myopathy (PSSM) and shivers in Belgian Draft Horses (BDHs) and determine whether there was an association between these 2 conditions. Methods: Prospective cohort study. Methods: 103 BDHs > 1 year old. Methods: Owners were questioned regarding clinical signs of PSSM, shivers, and hindquarter weakness, defined as poor hindquarter muscling and lack of propulsion. Blood samples were collected for determination of serum creatine kinase and aspartate transferase activities and serum selenium and vitamin E concentrations. A biopsy sample from the ...
Congenital stationary night blindness in a Thoroughbred and a Paso Fino.
Veterinary ophthalmology    December 20, 2005   Volume 8, Issue 6 415-419 doi: 10.1111/j.1463-5224.2005.00416.x
Nunnery C, Pickett JP, Zimmerman KL.This report documents congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) in two non-Appaloosa horse breeds (Thoroughbred and Paso Fino). History of vision impairment since birth, normal ocular structures on ophthalmic examination, and electroretinographic findings were consistent with CSNB. In one horse (Thoroughbred), a 9-year follow-up was carried out. In the Paso Fino, severe vision impairment from birth to approximately 1 year of age in both dim and bright light situations led to humane euthanasia and histopathologic confirmation of the disorder.
Single linkage group per chromosome genetic linkage map for the horse, based on two three-generation, full-sibling, crossbred horse reference families.
Genomics    November 28, 2005   Volume 87, Issue 1 1-29 doi: 10.1016/j.ygeno.2005.09.001
Swinburne JE, Boursnell M, Hill G, Pettitt L, Allen T, Chowdhary B, Hasegawa T, Kurosawa M, Leeb T, Mashima S, Mickelson JR, Raudsepp T, Tozaki T....A genetic linkage map of the horse consisting of 742 markers, which comprises a single linkage group for each of the autosomes and the X chromosome, is presented. The map has been generated from two three-generation full-sibling reference families, sired by the same stallion, in which there are 61 individuals in the F2 generation. Each linkage group has been assigned to a chromosome and oriented with reference to markers mapped by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The average interval between markers is 3.7 cM and the linkage groups collectively span 2772 cM. The 742 markers comprise 734 mic...
The B-cell CLL lymphoma 2 (BCL2) gene maps to equine chromosome 8q22.
Animal genetics    November 19, 2005   Volume 36, Issue 6 517-519 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2005.01359.x
Klukowska-Rötzler J, Bugno M, Slota E, Robinson NE, Piumi F, Guérin G, Dolf G, Gerber V.No abstract available
Exon skipping in the KIT gene causes a Sabino spotting pattern in horses.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    November 11, 2005   Volume 16, Issue 11 893-902 doi: 10.1007/s00335-005-2472-y
Brooks SA, Bailey E.Sabino (SB) is a white spotting pattern in the horse characterized by white patches on the face, lower legs, or belly, and interspersed white hairs on the midsection. Based on comparable phenotypes in humans and pigs, the KIT gene was investigated as the origin of the Sabino phenotype. In this article we report the genetic basis of one type of Sabino spotting pattern in horses that we call Sabino 1, with the alleles represented by the symbols SB1 and sb1. Transcripts of KIT were characterized by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and sequencing cDNA from horses with the g...
Detection of testosterone, nandrolone and precursors in horse hair.
Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry    November 9, 2005   Volume 383, Issue 6 903-908 doi: 10.1007/s00216-005-0104-8
Anielski P, Thieme D, Schlupp A, Grosse J, Ellendorff F, Mueller RK.Growing interest among several horse-breeder associations has initiated the development of a screening procedure to test for anabolic agents in hair, which has the advantage over blood and urine specimens of allowing long-term detection. An analytical method was established to monitor in tails or manes several anabolic substances available as veterinary medicines or as so-called nutritional supplements (clenbuterol, different esters or prohormones of nandrolone and testosterone). The analytical procedure to detect steroids in hair samples consists of the following steps: decontamination of the...
Genetic and environmental parameters for racing time at different distances in Brazilian Thoroughbreds.
Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie    November 9, 2005   Volume 122, Issue 6 393-399 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2005.00551.x
Mota MD, Abrahão AR, Oliveira HN.The aim of the present study was to investigate genetic parameters for racing time in Thoroughbred horses racing at distances between 1000 and 1600 m subdivided into 100-m intervals. The data provided by TURFETOTAL Ltda comprised races that occurred in the Gávea and Cidade Jardim race tracks over a period of 11 years (1992-2002) and consisted of 32,145 races and 238,890 time records. The variance components necessary to obtain the heritability and repeatability estimates of the traits studied were estimated with the MTDFREML program, and animal age at race (3 years old or younger, 4, 5 and ol...
Evaluation of slow cooling after centrifugation and glycerol addition at 22 degrees C versus direct freezing of semen in stallions with good and poor sperm longevity.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 299-302 
Knop K, Hoffmann N, Rath D, Sieme H.No abstract available
Seminal plasma proteins and semen characteristics in relation with fertility in the stallion.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 255-258 
Barrier-Battut I, Dacheux JL, Gatti JL, Rouviere P, Stanciu C, Dacheux F, Vidament M.No abstract available
Effect of extender and method of preservation on motility of cooled stallion spermatozoa.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 281-283 
Rota A, Magelli C, Impeduglia R, Panzani D, Camillo F.No abstract available
Effects of cushioned centrifugation technique on sperm recovery and sperm quality in stallions with good and poor semen freezability.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 294-297 
Knop K, Hoffmann N, Rath D, Sieme H.No abstract available
Effect of antibiotics on viability and fertility of equine semen cooled to 5 degrees C.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 277-280 
Macedo LP, Papa FO, Gomes GM, Melo CM, Oliveira JV, Dellaqua JA.No abstract available
Effect of exercise on scrotal surface temperature in the stallion.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 237-239 
Staempfli S, Janett F, Burger D, Kuendig H, Haessig M, Thun R.In this study the effect of exercise (treadmill, riding) on scrotal surface temperature (SST) in the stallion with and without suspensory was evaluated. Our results show that SST was significantly influenced by exercise and suspensory the latter causing in general a rise in SST. Furthermore, from SST measurements in stallions exercised on treadmill and by riding, it is concluded that air circulation near the scrotum must be considered an important thermoregulatory factor.
Reproductive parameters of Mini-Shetland stallions in north Germany.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 267-270 
Neves AP, Trein CR, Möller G, Mattos RC, Klug E.No abstract available
Equine seminal plasma proteins related with fertility.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 305-308 
Jobim MI, Bustamante Filho IC, Trein C, Wald VB, Gregory RM, Mattos RC.No abstract available
Effects of different extenders on sperm parameters and fertility of equine cooled semen.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 275-277 
Carvalho GA, Zahn FS, Melo CM, Alvarenga MA, Dell'aqua JA, Papa FO.No abstract available
Protein profile of equine seminal plasma: correlation to semen freezability.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 313-315 
Zahn FS, Papa FO, Melo CM, Brisola ML.No abstract available
Evaluation of acrosomal integrity of stallions cryopreserved with amides and glycerol.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 288-291 
Landim-Alvarenga FC, Medeiros AS, Papa FO, Alvarenga MA.No abstract available
Cooling rate, centrifugation and percoll selection in equine semen stored at +4 degrees C.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 226-228 
Trein CR, Brito EL, Neves AP, Jobim MI, Ribeiro LA, Mattos RC.No abstract available
Relations between low rates of in vitro fertilization and induction of sperm acrosome reactions by zona pellucida in the equine species.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 270-271 
Mugnier S, Magistrini M, Sachet L, Lahuec C, Yvon JM, Meyers S, Goudet G.No abstract available
Effects of hyaluronic acid supplementation on motility of stallion spermatozoa after cryopreservation.
Animal reproduction science    November 3, 2005   Volume 89, Issue 1-4 284-285 
Mari G, Iacono E, Rizzato G, Merlo B, Belluzzi S.No abstract available
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