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Topic:Immunology

The equine immune system is a complex network of cells, tissues, and organs that work collaboratively to defend against pathogens and maintain homeostasis. It consists of innate and adaptive components, each with distinct functions and mechanisms. The innate immune system provides the first line of defense through physical barriers, phagocytic cells, and the complement system. The adaptive immune system involves lymphocytes, such as B cells and T cells, which generate specific responses to antigens and provide immunological memory. Research in equine immunology explores the interactions between these components, the impact of genetic and environmental factors on immune function, and the development of vaccines and therapeutics. This page gathers peer-reviewed studies and scholarly articles focusing on the mechanisms, regulation, and clinical applications of the equine immune system in health and disease.
Rhodococcus equi: an animal and human pathogen.
Clinical microbiology reviews    January 1, 1991   Volume 4, Issue 1 20-34 doi: 10.1128/CMR.4.1.20
Prescott JF.Recent isolations of Rhodococcus equi from cavitatory pulmonary disease in patients with AIDS have aroused interest among medical microbiologists in this unusual organism. Earlier isolations from humans had also been in immunosuppressed patients following hemolymphatic tumors or renal transplantation. This organism has been recognized for many years as a cause of a serious pyogranulomatous pneumonia of young foals and is occasionally isolated from granulomatous lesions in several other species, in some cases following immunosuppression. The last decade has seen many advances in understanding o...
Proviral sequences detected by polymerase chain reaction in peripheral blood cells of horses with equine infectious anemia lentivirus.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1991   Volume 117, Issue 1-2 109-119 doi: 10.1007/BF01310496
O'Rourke KI, Besola ML, McGuire TC.Proviral sequences in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 3 horses with acute equine infectious anemia virus were monitored using the polymerase chain reaction. Provirus was detected during the initial viremic episode in each horse and during each of 3 relapsing viremic cycles, although the appearance of provirus lagged behind the onset of viremia. Following each viremic episode, provirus levels in the peripheral monocytes decreased to less than 1 copy in 5 x 10(6) cells.
Effects of human alpha interferon on experimentally induced equine herpesvirus-1 infection in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 12 2006-2010 
Seahorn TL, Carter GK, Martens JG, Crandell RA, Martin MT, Scrutchfield WL, Cummins JM, Martens RJ.The immunotherapeutic effect of low-dose human alpha interferon on viral shedding and clinical disease was evaluated in horses inoculated with equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1). Eighteen clinically healthy weanling horses, 5 to 7 months old, were allotted to 3 equal groups. Two groups were treated orally with human alpha-2a interferon (0.22 or 2.2 U/kg of body weight), on days 2 and 1 before inoculation with EHV-1, the day of inoculation, and again on postinoculation day 1. The horses of the remaining group were given a placebo orally on the same days. The horses were monitored daily for changes in...
[From Rumanian folk medicine: Non-specific stimulus therapy using transcutaneous implantation of hellebore (Helleborus purpurascens, Fam. Ranunculaceae) in agriculturally useful animals].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    December 1, 1990   Volume 97, Issue 12 525-529 
Bogdan I, Nechifor A, Băşea I, Hruban E.In the Rumanian traditional medicine a transcutaneous implantation of the root of Helleborus purpurascens is used to provoke leucocytosis and neutrophils with the aim to activate chronic diseases for better healing. The skin is perforated with a thick needle (in cattle and horses in the area of the thorax, in sheep and pigs in the ear flap), the transplant is introduced and after 24 hours removed. Though the method is more than 100 years old, it is not reported in the literature. The way of action is unknown. The investigation are performed to show the efficacy of this method of Helleborus-imp...
Immunohistochemical localization of alpha 2-beta 1-glycoprotein in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 12 2011-2014 
Winder NC, Pellegrini A, von Fellenberg R.Alpha 2-beta 1-glycoprotein may be found free in horse serum or complexed with alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor to form pre-alpha 2-elastase inhibitor. There has been little information published concerning alpha 2-beta 1-glycoprotein and its possible tissue sources in horses. A peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique was used to identify alpha 2-beta 1-glycoprotein in buffy coat and bone marrow neutrophils of healthy horses. Macrophages and neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage samples from clinically normal horses and from horses with chronic pulmonary disease also were positive for alpha 2-beta 1-g...
Immunohistochemical detection of papillomavirus structural antigens in animal hyperplastic and neoplastic epithelial lesions.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 10 760-770 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1990.tb00970.x
Sironi G, Caniatti M, Scanziani E.One hundred and seventy-two hyperplastic and neoplastic epithelial lesions from 8 different mammalian and 1 avian species have been tested with an immunohistochemical technique to detect papillomavirus structural antigens. Selected lesions were diagnosed histologically as papilloma, fibropapilloma, equine sarcoid, squamous cell carcinoma, basalioma, epulis, keratoacanthoma, trichoepithelioma, pilomatrixoma, epidermal inclusion cyst, and hyperkeratotic or acanthotic epidermal lesions. Positive nuclear staining was detected in 14 out of 23 papillomas, 8 out of 32 fibropapillomas and in 1 out of ...
[Etiology and occurrence of periodic eye inflammation of horses in the area of Berlin].
Tierarztliche Praxis    December 1, 1990   Volume 18, Issue 6 623-627 
Alexander CS, Keller H.Over 130 cases of equine periodic ophthalmia (p.o.), which were treated as in-patients at the Equine Clinic of the Free University of Berlin in the last 35 years, were examined statistically in relation to the age and gender of the animals involved as well as to the development of the illness and the season in which it arose. As regards aetiology, the extraction of 71 affected Trotters was investigated. Antibodies to toxoplasmosis, leptospirosis and intestinal parasites were found only in some of the patients. Younger animals, aged between one and four years, and male animals (63.6%) were pred...
Equine monoclonal antibodies recognize common epitopes on variants of equine infectious anaemia virus.
Immunology    December 1, 1990   Volume 71, Issue 4 592-594 
Perryman LE, O'Rourke KI, Mason PH, McGuire TC.Equine-murine xenohybridoma cells were produced using SP2/0 murine myeloma cells and splenic lymph node cells obtained from horses infected with 10(6) TCID50 of single cloned variants of equine infectious anaemia virus (EIAV). The xenohybridomas secreted equine IgG monoclonal antibodies reactive with EIAV in enzyme immunoassays employing purified virus. Seven antibodies were studied in detail. They bound to viral glycoproteins (gp90 or gp45) in radioimmunoprecipitation assays, and reacted with homologous EIAV as well as five other cloned variants of EIAV. When evaluated against a single cloned...
The open reading frame ORF S3 of equine infectious anemia virus is expressed during the viral life cycle.
Journal of virology    December 1, 1990   Volume 64, Issue 12 6319-6324 doi: 10.1128/JVI.64.12.6319-6324.1990
Saman E, Breugelmans K, Heyndrickx L, Merregaert J.The genome of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) contains several small open reading frames (ORFs), the importance of which in the development of the virus is not clear. We investigated the possibility that the largest of these ORFs (ORF S3) is expressed during the course of the viral infection. The ORF S3 information was expressed in Escherichia coli, and the antigen was used to raise monospecific antiserum. A 20-kDa protein expressed in cells producing EIAV was identified as the gene product of ORF S3. Furthermore, sera from EIAV-infected animals specifically recognized this protein, indi...
Measurement of endotoxic activity in feces of normal horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    October 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 8 638-640 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1990.tb01108.x
Kawamura S, Hirayama K, Mitsuoka T.Two chromogenic Limulus amebocyte lysate systems were evaluated for the measurement of endotoxic activity in feces of normal horses. Fecal extracts had neither non-specific nor inhibitory effect on the test reaction, and the two systems with different specificity showed equivalent results. Endotoxic activities in feces of healthy horses averaged 5.7 +/- 2.8 microns/g wet weight. Correlation between the endotoxin levels and the fecal microbial flora could not be determined.
Acrosome reaction of stallion spermatozoa evaluated with monoclonal antibody and zona-free hamster eggs.
Molecular reproduction and development    October 1, 1990   Volume 27, Issue 2 152-158 doi: 10.1002/mrd.1080270210
Zhang J, Boyle MS, Smith CA, Moore HD.The acrosome of the stallion spermatozoon was visualized by indirect immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibody (18.6) which recognized an integral acrosomal membrane component. Localization was confirmed by electron microscopy using peroxidase labelled antibody. In fresh semen samples (n = 19), 73.9 +/- 9.1% of the spermatozoa from five fertile stallions displayed a uniform bright fluorescence over their acrosome region. In two semen samples from an infertile stallion only 28% and 35% of spermatozoa showed the same pattern of fluorescence. Spermatozoa from fertile stallions incubated for up ...
Development of an avidin-biotin dot enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and its comparison with other serological tests for diagnosis of glanders in equines.
Veterinary microbiology    October 1, 1990   Volume 25, Issue 1 77-85 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(90)90095-d
Verma RD, Sharma JK, Venkateswaran KS, Batra HV.A dot enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (dot ELISA) was developed for diagnosis of glanders in equines. The test was based on the detection of IgG antibodies to Pseudomonas mallei antigens bound to nitrocellulose coated on plastic strips (dipsticks), the reaction being amplified by an avidin-biotin system with biotinylated anti-horse IgG and horseradish peroxidase-avidin D. Sera from 810 normal, six naturally infected and 48 sensitized equines were tested by this assay, and results were compared with complement fixation, indirect haemagglutination and counter-immunoelectrophoresis tests. Dot E...
Effects of active immunization against GnRH on LH, FSH and prolactin storage, secretion and response to their secretagogues in pony geldings.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1990   Volume 68, Issue 10 3322-3329 doi: 10.2527/1990.68103322x
Rabb MH, Thompson DL, Barry BE, Colborn DR, Hehnke KE, Garza F.Six pony geldings were actively immunized against GnRH conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) to study 1) the relative dependency of LH and FSH storage, secretion and response to GnRH analog on GnRH bioavailability and 2) the effects of reduced GnRH bioavailability on GnRH storage in the hypothalamus. Five geldings were immunized against BSA. Geldings were immunized in December and 4, 8, 14, 20, 26 and 32 wk later. Ponies immunized against GnRH had increased (P less than .01) GnRH binding in plasma within 6 wk. By June, plasma concentrations of LH and FSH in ponies immunized against GnRH had...
Production of interleukin 2 and expression of interleukin 2 receptors by pony peripheral blood lymphocytes after stimulation with a soluble fraction of Trypanosoma evansi.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    October 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 8 631-637 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1990.tb01107.x
Ahmed JS, Schmid G, Hörchner F.Pony peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) were stimulated with a soluble fraction of Trypanosoma (T.) evansi (SF). As determined by 3H-thymidine incorporation, the cells underwent a proliferative response and were able to: a) produce a factor having the biological activities of interleukin 2 (IL-2) since their supernatants could support the in vitro growth of pony PBL stimulated with concanavalin A (Con A-blasts); b) undergo a further proliferative response when incubated in short term cultures with SF, human recombinant IL-2 (hrIL-2), or both c) bind specifically radiolabelled hrIL-2 (125I-hrIL...
Modulation of an adhesion-related surface antigen on equine neutrophils by bacterial lipopolysaccharide and antiinflammatory drugs.
Journal of leukocyte biology    October 1, 1990   Volume 48, Issue 4 306-315 doi: 10.1002/jlb.48.4.306
Bochsler PN, Slauson DO, Neilsen NR.The essential role of the CD11/CD18 family of leukocyte adhesion molecules (LeuCams) in neutrophil-substrate adhesion is well documented. We have found that a monoclonal antibody designated 60.3 (MoAb 60.3) that recognizes the common beta-subunit (CD18) on human neutrophils (PMN) also recognizes a surface antigen on equine PMN. Antigen expression as assessed by immunofluorescence flow cytometry was enhanced by zymosan-activated serum (ZAS) or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) stimulation. Pretreatment of equine PMN with MoAb 60.3 inhibited ZAS-stimulated aggregation, indicating that the mo...
Isolation and partial structural characterization of an equine fibrinogen CNBr fragment that exhibits immunologic cross-reactivity with an A alpha-chain cross-linking region of human fibrinogen.
Biochemistry    September 25, 1990   Volume 29, Issue 38 8907-8916 doi: 10.1021/bi00490a005
Sobel JH, Thibodeau CA, Kolks MA, Canfield RE.Immunochemical studies of equine fibrinogen were conducted to characterize the structural basis for the immunologic cross-reactivity observed between human and equine A alpha chains when employing an antiserum to the 26K, human cyanogen bromide (CNBr) fragment, A alpha 241-476 (CNBr VIII). A 38K, equine CNBr fragment that reacts with this antiserum was isolated from CNBr-digested equine fibrinogen by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. It was further purified by sequential hydrophobic chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B, followed by reversed-phased (C-8) high-performance liquid chromatography ...
Phagocytosis of opsonized fluorescent microspheres by equine polymorphonuclear leukocytes.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    September 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 7 481-490 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1990.tb01087.x
Foerster RJ, Wolf G.Equine blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) were isolated by buffy coat and hypotonic lysis of residual erythrocytes. A highly reproducible method is described for measuring the uptake of opsonized latex microspheres by equine PMN using flowcytometry. The use of cytochalasin D allowed for differentiation of ingested from attached particles. The kinetics of phagocytosis in vitro is shown for different experimental conditions. We developed an assay for evaluation of phagocytic capacity of PMN which allows the assessment of drugs for their influence on phagocytosis in vivo as well as in vitro...
Autonomic innervation of the equine urinary bladder.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    September 1, 1990   Volume 19, Issue 3 276-287 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.1990.tb00890.x
Prieto D, Benedito S, Rivera L, Hernández M, García-Sacristan A.The distribution and density of intrinsic autonomic nerve fibers and cells were studied in the equine urinary bladder by means of the peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunohistochemical method to localize tyrosine-hydroxylase (TH), and by means of a histochemical technique to detect acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity. The results suggest that the equine urinary bladder, like that of other mammalian species, possesses a rich autonomic innervation which includes catecholaminergic and acetylcholinesterase positive nerves. At least a part of these nerve fibers have an intrinsic origin from ganglion ce...
Immunodiffusion test for serodiagnosing subcutaneous zygomycosis.
Journal of clinical microbiology    September 1, 1990   Volume 28, Issue 9 1887-1890 doi: 10.1128/jcm.28.9.1887-1890.1990
Kaufman L, Mendoza L, Standard PG.Culture filtrate antigens of Basidiobolus ranarum and Conidiobolus coronatus were analyzed by immunodiffusion (ID) with homologous rabbit antisera. B. ranarum and C. coronatus were each found to have five specific antigens. Results of tests with heterologous antisera indicated that all of the species shared at least one antigen. ID tests incorporating the specific precipitin bands as references were developed for detection of basidiobolomycosis and conidiobolomycosis. These tests were performed with sera from humans and horses with proven basidiobolomycosis and conidiobolomycosis as well as wi...
Of Horses and Men: Urticaria.
Veterinary dermatology    September 1, 1990   Volume 1, Issue 3 103-112 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3164.1990.tb00088.x
Fadok VA.Abstract- Urticarial eruptions, with or without pruritus, are common lesions in horses. The pathogenesis of these lesions can include immunological and other mechanisms. Research in the human field suggests that the mast cell co-ordinates the urticarial response by releasing a complex array of inflammatory mediators. Other cells, including the neutrophil, the eosinophil and the macrophage, may also play a role in the development of wheals. Elucidation of the role of many of these cells and mediators in the evolution of urticaria is only just beginning. Successful treatment of this dermatologic...
Studies of antigenic components in acid extracts of group C streptococci with special reference to Streptococcus equi.
Zentralblatt fur Bakteriologie : international journal of medical microbiology    September 1, 1990   Volume 273, Issue 4 459-470 doi: 10.1016/s0934-8840(11)80453-6
Groschup M, Müller HP, Weiss R, Schliesser T.For the determination of a species-specific antigen of Streptococcus (S.) equi, acid extracts of group C streptococcal strains from horses (S. equi, S. zooepidemicus, S. equisimilis) were investigated using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and the immunoblotting technique. Using sera of horses suffering from strangles as well as sera from horses with respiratory infection of unknown etiology, Western blotting yielded more or less multiple banding reactions with bands in the 70, 54, 42, 40, and 31-28 kd molecular weight ranges against extracts of all of the 3 different bacterial species. Howe...
An indirect sandwich ELISA utilising F(ab’)2 fragments for the detection of African horsesickness virus.
Journal of virological methods    September 1, 1990   Volume 29, Issue 3 279-289 doi: 10.1016/0166-0934(90)90055-k
du Plessis DH, van Wyngaardt W, Bremer CW.African horsesickness virus (AHSV), an important disease of equines is caused by an orbivirus. Because of the need to contain the spread of the disease, it is often essential to make a rapid diagnosis. For this purpose, an ELISA capable of detecting viral antigen in animal tissue and in cell culture fluid was developed. Immobilised F(ab')2 fragments prepared by digestion of AHSV-specific IgG with pepsin were used to trap virus from tissue homogenates or cell culture supernatant. After addition of intact IgG as detecting antibody, Staphylococcus aureus protein A labelled with horseradish peroxi...
Invasive equine trophoblast expresses conventional class I major histocompatibility complex antigens.
Development (Cambridge, England)    September 1, 1990   Volume 110, Issue 1 63-71 doi: 10.1242/dev.110.1.63
Donaldson WL, Zhang CH, Oriol JG, Antczak DF.Monoclonal antibodies and alloantisera were used in an indirect immunohistochemical assay to determine the expression of class I and class II Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) antigens by equine placental cells and the endometrial tissues at the fetal-maternal interface. MHC class I antigens were expressed at high density on the surface of the trophoblast cells of the chorionic girdle at days 32-36, just prior to their invasion of the endometrium. The mature gonadotrophin-secreting cells of the endometrial cups, which are derived from the chorionic girdle cells, had greatly reduced levels...
Comparative evaluation of the agar gel immunodiffusion test and two commercial ELISA kits for the serodiagnosis of equine infectious anemia.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    August 1, 1990   Volume 37, Issue 6 448-458 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1990.tb01082.x
Bürki F, Rossmanith E.Selected sets of serum samples of horses were tested blindly in a comparative investigation for antibodies against Equine Infectious Anemia (EIA) virus. Three commercial kits were used, a well-established agar-gel immuno-diffusion kit which our laboratory has been using routinely for 14 years on one hand, a competitive ELISA kit (CELISA) and a non-competitive ELISA kit on the other hand. The American EIA Reference Laboratory in Ames cotested 56 serum samples with the same 3 products, with highest-level correlation, thereby ascertaining full dependability of our own results. Five EIA experts su...
Suppression of lymphocyte proliferation by a greater than 30,000 molecular weight factor in horse conceptus-conditioned medium.
Biology of reproduction    August 1, 1990   Volume 43, Issue 2 298-304 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod43.2.298
Roth TL, White KL, Thompson DL, Barry BE, Capehart JS, Colborn DR, Rabb MH.In this experiment we have identified and partially characterized the immunosuppressive activity of preimplantation horse conceptus-conditioned medium (HCCM). Horse conceptuses were nonsurgically flushed from mares at Days 9-10 (n = 6), 15-16 (n = 3), and 25-26 (n = 3). After incubating the conceptuses for 24 h in RPMI-1640 supplemented with 15% fetal calf serum (FCS) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin, HCCM was obtained from cultures and tested for immunosuppressive activity in lymphocyte proliferation assays. Peripheral blood lymphocytes obtained from randomly selected mares were stimulated with...
Cloning and characterization of cDNAs encoding equine infectious anemia virus tat and putative Rev proteins.
Journal of virology    August 1, 1990   Volume 64, Issue 8 3716-3725 doi: 10.1128/JVI.64.8.3716-3725.1990
Stephens RM, Derse D, Rice NR.We isolated and characterized six cDNA clones from an equine infectious anemia virus-infected cell line that displays a Rev-defective phenotype. With the exception of one splice site in one of the clones, all six cDNAs exhibited the same splicing pattern and consisted of four exons. Exon 1 contained the 5' end of the genome; exon 2 contained the tat gene from mid-genome; exon 3 consisted of a small section of env, near the 5' end of the env gene; and exon 4 contained the putative rev open reading frame from the 3' end of the genome. The structures of the cDNAs predict a bicistronic message in ...
Isolation, characterization, and quantitative analysis of C-reactive protein from horses.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1990   Volume 51, Issue 8 1215-1220 
Takiguchi M, Fujinaga T, Naiki M, Mizuno S, Otomo K.C-reactive protein (CRP) was isolated from equine serum by use of calcium-dependent affinity chromatography conjugated pneumococcal C-polysaccharide, anion exchange chromatography, and gel filtration. It was identified as genuine CRP by its immunochemical cross-reactivity with anti-human CRP, its homology with human CRP in amino acid composition, and its pentameric structure as revealed by electron microscopy. Purified equine CRP had a molecular weight of approximately 118,000 and was composed of 5 identical, nonglycosylated and noncovalently associated subunits with molecular weight of approx...
Culicoides hypersensitivity.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 230-231 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04257.x
Holmes M.No abstract available
Immunosuppressive properties of follicular fluid from preovulatory horse follicles.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    July 1, 1990   Volume 89, Issue 2 627-632 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0890627
Watson ED, Zanecosky HG.Fluid was aspirated from the preovulatory follicles of mares before and 12, 24 and 36 h after intravenous administration of hCG. Follicular fluid significantly (P less than 0.001) reduced lymphocyte blastogenesis in vitro and, at a dilution of 1:100, fluid collected at 36 h after administration of hCG was significantly more suppressive (P less than 0.01) than fluid collected before 36 h. Suppression of blastogenesis was reduced by extracting the follicular fluid with ether or by charcoal treatment (P less than 0.01) or by heating at 56 degrees C for 30 min (P less than 0.05). Preincubation of ...
Carbonic anhydrase III in equine tissues and sera determined by a highly sensitive enzyme-immunoassay.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1990   Volume 22, Issue 4 247-250 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1990.tb04262.x
Nishita T, Matsushita H.A sensitive sandwich enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for measuring equine carbonic anhydrase III (CA-III) was established using a microplate as a solid-phase and peroxidase as a labelling enzyme. The assay can detect concentrations as low as 5 ng/ml using 20 microliters of sample sera. Within-run coefficients of variation obtained using standard equine CA-III were less than 5 per cent. CA-III levels in equine serum ranged from 5 to 50 ng/ml (n = 370), and apparently abnormal levels of CA-III from 100 to 1900 ng/ml (n = 27) were observed. The concentrations of immunoreactive CA-III in the extracts of ...