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Topic:Immune Response

The immune response in horses involves a complex network of cells, tissues, and molecules that work together to protect the animal from pathogens and other harmful agents. This process includes both innate and adaptive immune mechanisms. Innate immunity provides the first line of defense and involves components such as physical barriers, phagocytic cells, and the complement system. Adaptive immunity, on the other hand, is characterized by the activation of lymphocytes and the production of antibodies, which provide a targeted response to specific antigens. Key components of the equine immune system include T cells, B cells, and various cytokines that facilitate communication between immune cells. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the mechanisms, regulation, and implications of immune responses in equine health.
Viral respiratory infections of horses: host resistance and immunity.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1975   Volume 166, Issue 1 78-80 
Coggins L.No abstract available
Immunological characteristics of proteins and enzymes from semen plasma of stallions collected fractionwise.
Bulletin de l'Academie polonaise des sciences. Serie des sciences biologiques    January 1, 1975   Volume 23, Issue 11 765-766 
Balbierz H, Bielański W, Kosiniak K, Nikolajczuk M.No abstract available
The role of bacterial adjuvant in experimental arthritis.
Rheumatology    January 1, 1975   Volume 6 283-287 
Glynn LE.No abstract available
Mixed IgG-IgA cryoglobulinemia in human serum sickness. Evidence for Equine IgG in the cryoprecipitate.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1975   Volume 48, Issue 6 756-763 doi: 10.1159/000231364
Moroz LA, Comerford TA, Guttman RD.Serum sickness followed the administration of anti-lymphocyte globulin to a patient with multiple sclerosis. In addition to other characteristic features of this syndrome, there was hypocomplementemia and transient renal dysfunction similar to that observed in the 'one-shot' experimental model of serum sickness. Cryoglobulinemia was transiently demonstrable at the height of the inflammatory response. Analysis of the purified cryoprecipitate revealed the presence of human IgG and IgA, and, in addition, equine IgG. This demonstration of a well-defined exagenous antigen in the cryoprecipitate pro...
Equine anti-hapten antibody. IX. IgM anti-lactose antibodies.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    January 1, 1975   Volume 114, Issue 1 Pt 1 99-101 
Chua MM, Morgan DO, Karush F.The immune response to a bacterial vaccine of Streptococcus faecalis (strain N) was characterized in all of the seven horses studied by the sustained production of about 90% IgM anti-lactose antibody over a period of 44 weeks with maximum values of the total antibody ranging from 4 mg/ml of serum to 12 mg/ml of serum. With respect to the binding of a lactose-containing ligand the association constants of the antibodies purified from sera obtained between 5 and 44 weeks fell in the range of 1 times 10-5 M-1 to 2 times 10-5 M-1. Not only was there no significant indication of maturation of a-fin...
[Contribution to the antigenic study of influenza viruses in animals. II.–Antibodies, antineuraminidase in horse: conditions of apparition and importance (author’s transl)].
Annales de recherches veterinaires. Annals of veterinary research    January 1, 1975   Volume 6, Issue 4 411-420 
Fontaine M, Fontaine M.In the first part of this paper the conditions for a specific titration of antibodies against the neuraminidase (N) of each of the two horse virus subtypes are defined. The antigens used are: the H72Neq 1 recombining agent to measure the anti Neq1 antibodies and the A/Duck/Ukraine/63 strain for the anti Neq2 antibodies. The immunity response to neuraminidase appears after the natural disease; this response is studied in two foci, one due to a virus belonging to the A equi I subtype (Loire 73 strain), the other to a virus of the A equi 2 subtype (SHN 73 strain). The kinetics of apparition of an...
Immune response of horses after simultaneous or sequential vaccination against eastern, western, and Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1974   Volume 165, Issue 7 621-625 
Jochim MM, Barber TL.No abstract available
Studies on complement-fixation reaction in equine infectious anemia. I. Development and activities of complement-fixing and complement fixation-inhibiting antibodies.
Japanese journal of microbiology    September 1, 1974   Volume 18, Issue 5 385-395 doi: 10.1111/j.1348-0421.1974.tb00825.x
Nakamura J, Kuroda S, Ueda S, Samejima T.No abstract available
[Production of antirickettsial sera in horses. I. Production and approval of immune serum to Prowazek rickettsiae].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    August 1, 1974   Issue 8 16-20 
Barban PS, Misenzhnikov AV, Pantiukhins AN, MirskiÄ­ VI.No abstract available
Passive cutaneous anaphylaxis and its enhancement by normal IgG.
Immunology    August 1, 1974   Volume 27, Issue 2 271-283 
Williams MR.Rats were injected intradermally with rabbit anti-ovalbumin serum and 3 hours later were challenged intravenously with ovalbumin and Evans Blue dye. Inflammatory lesions were produced within 20 minutes and their size was markedly dose-dependent. Attempts were made to interfere with this passive cutaneous anaphylaxis (PCA) by admixture of normal IgG with the rabbit anti-ovalbumin to measure the relative tissue binding affinities of IgG from various species. It was found that normal IgG from any of the species tested had an enhancing effect on PCA in rats. These immunoglobulins serially arranged...
Recall of immunity in horses previously immunised with an aluminium based tetanus toxoid.
The Veterinary record    July 20, 1974   Volume 95, Issue 3 62-63 doi: 10.1136/vr.95.3.62
Scarnell J.No abstract available
Some practical aspects of the transfer of passive immunity to newborn foals.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1974   Volume 6, Issue 3 109-115 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1974.tb03942.x
Jeffcott LB.No abstract available
[Natural antidiphtheria immunity in horses. Its relationship to decrease of diphtheria morbidity in Romania].
Archives roumaines de pathologie experimentales et de microbiologie    July 1, 1974   Volume 33, Issue 3-4 357-361 
Stănică E, Stoian C, Potorac E, Oprişan R, Cuşa E.No abstract available
Purification and antigenicity of an M-like protein of Streptococcus equi.
Infection and immunity    July 1, 1974   Volume 10, Issue 1 116-122 doi: 10.1128/iai.10.1.116-122.1974
Woolcock JB.A cell wall component of Streptococcus equi analogous to the M protein of group A streptococci has been identified and purified. A highly purified product has been obtained from cells by hot acid extraction, followed by acid precipitation, ammonium sulfate fractionation, and column chromatography. This product reacts with S. equi antiserum. The existence of this fraction in S. equi has been confirmed by the failure of trypsin-treated cells and their extracts to remove the long-chaining capacity of S. equi antiserum. The antigenicity of this M-like protein when incorporated in adjuvant has been...
Comparison of SN and HI antibody dose response curves in chickens, rabbits, foals and horses following vaccination with equine influenza vaccine.
Journal of biological standardization    April 1, 1974   Volume 2, Issue 2 129-137 doi: 10.1016/0092-1157(74)90027-4
Stellmann C, Petermann HG.After vaccination of chickens, rabbits, foals and horses, HI and SN antibody dose response curves were compared for A/Equi 1/Prague and A/Equi 2/Paris strains. The two curves are parallel for a given strain and the relationship of HI and SN titres is constant, whatever the animal species. The distribution of HI and SN titres varies for the two strains. This variation, which is independent of animal species, may be related to the number of sites necessary for the antigenic-antibody response in vitro. It is suggested that the testing of equine influenza vaccine be carried out in the ...
Early development of and pathology associated with Strongylus edentatus.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine : Revue canadienne de medecine comparee    April 1, 1974   Volume 38, Issue 2 124-138 
McCraw BM, Slocombe JO.Pony foals inoculated with infective Strongylus edentatus larvae were monitored for clinical signs and selected blood changes and were examined at necropsy from two to 56 days postinfection. Larvae penetrated the intestine and reached the liver intravenously before 40 hours postinfection. Occasional thrombi and larval tracks associated with the intima of cecal and colic veins suggested aberrant paths. Larvae in the liver doubled in width between seven and 15 days postinfection and a sudden increment in circulating eosinophils occurred between 11 and 15 days. These changes were probably associa...
Immunochemical studies of infectious mononucleosis. IV. Effect of proteases on the glycoprotein of horse erythrocytes.
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)    March 1, 1974   Volume 145, Issue 3 1100-1105 doi: 10.3181/00379727-145-37961
Fletcher MA, Lo TM, Levey GS.No abstract available
Eosinophillic granuloma of the lung with sawdust and horse protein hypersensitivity.
Clinical allergy    March 1, 1974   Volume 4, Issue 1 71-78 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.1974.tb01364.x
Girard JP, Bouzakoura C.No abstract available
Separation of the immunosuppressive and glomerular basement membrane-reactive antibodies in horse antiserum to human thymus.
Transplantation    February 1, 1974   Volume 17, Issue 2 188-193 doi: 10.1097/00007890-197402000-00006
Wilson S, Sakac E, Logan L.No abstract available
Equine anti-human lymphocyte globulin III. Some immunochemical properties and in vitro assays of ALG and its subfractions.
Texas reports on biology and medicine    January 1, 1974   Volume 32, Issue 3-4 745-772 
Wolf RE, Sarles HE, Remmers AR, Fish JC, Mattingly DF, Ritzmann SE.No abstract available
Letter: Sweet itch in horses.
The Veterinary record    December 8, 1973   Volume 93, Issue 23 617 doi: 10.1136/vr.93.23.617
Baker KP.No abstract available
Active and passive cutaneous anaphylaxis in the horse following immunization with benzylpenicilloyl-bovine gamma globulin (BPO20-BGG).
Research in veterinary science    November 1, 1973   Volume 15, Issue 3 347-352 
Schatzmann U, de Weck AL, Gerber H, Lazàry S, Straub R, Pauli B.No abstract available
[Route of inoculation and aluminium hydroxide influences in the immunological response of horses vaccinated against equine influenza (author’s transl)].
Arquivos do Instituto Biologico    October 1, 1973   Volume 40, Issue 4 357-368 
Cunha RG, da Silva Passos W, Rodrigues AF.No abstract available
Passive immunity in the foal: measurement of immunoglobulin classes and specific antibody.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1973   Volume 34, Issue 10 1299-1303 
McGuire TC, Crawford TB.No abstract available
Immune response of equine fetus to coliphage T2.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1973   Volume 34, Issue 10 1363-1364 
Martin BR, Larson KA.No abstract available
Regulation of the immune response. IV. Antibody-mediated suppression of the immune response to haptens and heterologous erythrocyte antigens in vitro.
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)    October 1, 1973   Volume 111, Issue 4 1228-1235 
Kappler JW, van der Hoven A, Dharmarajan U, Hoffmann M.No abstract available
Characteristics of the in vitro stimulation of horse leucocytes by phytohemagglutinin and antigen.
Zeitschrift fur Immunitatsforschung, experimentelle und klinische Immunologie    June 1, 1973   Volume 145, Issue 4 364-375 
Lazàry S, de Weck AL, Gerber H, Schatzmann U, Straub R.No abstract available
Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis: antibody response in vaccinated horses and resistance to infection with virulent virus.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 15, 1973   Volume 162, Issue 4 280-283 
Jochim MM, Barber TL, Luedke AJ.No abstract available
The immunology of streptococcal infections.
Australian veterinary journal    February 1, 1973   Volume 49, Issue 2 85-90 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1973.tb09322.x
Woolcock JB.No abstract available
Lymphocyte receptors for autoantigens, autologous serum inhibits self-recognition.
Nature: New biology    January 3, 1973   Volume 241, Issue 105 25-26 doi: 10.1038/newbio241025a0
Wekerle H, Cohen IR, Feldman M.No abstract available
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