Analyze Diet

Topic:Iron

Iron is an essential trace mineral in horses that plays a significant role in various physiological processes, including oxygen transport, energy metabolism, and enzyme function. It is a key component of hemoglobin and myoglobin, proteins responsible for transporting oxygen in the blood and muscles, respectively. Iron is also involved in the function of certain enzymes and the synthesis of DNA. Horses typically obtain iron from their diet, with forages and grains being primary sources. However, both iron deficiency and overload can lead to health issues, such as anemia or hemosiderosis. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the metabolism, dietary requirements, and health implications of iron in equine physiology.
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...
Correlation between 25 element contents in mane hair in riding horses and atrioventricular block.
Biological trace element research    December 6, 2005   Volume 108, Issue 1-3 127-136 doi: 10.1385/BTER:108:1-3:127
Asano K, Suzuki K, Chiba M, Sera K, Matsumoto T, Asano R, Sakai T.The influence of atrioventricular block (AV-block) on the trace elemental status in a horse hair was studied. The particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE) method has provided a reliable, rapid, easy, and relatively inexpensive diagnostic method. Twenty-five elements (Al, Br, Ca, Cl, Co, Cu, Cr, Fe, Hg, K, Mg, Mn, Na, Nb, Ni, P, Pb, Rb, S, Se, Si, Sr, Ti, Y, and Zn) in mane hair and serum were measured by the PIXE method. A horse hair with first- and second-degree AV-block contained significantly greater amounts of Br, Ca, Sr, and Zn than those of horses without electrocardiographic abnormalities...
Use of serum amyloid A and other acute phase reactants to monitor the inflammatory response after castration in horses: a field study.
Equine veterinary journal    November 22, 2005   Volume 37, Issue 6 552-556 doi: 10.2746/042516405775314853
Jacobsen S, Jensen JC, Frei S, Jensen AL, Thoefner MB.Early recognition of excessive inflammation and infectious complications after surgery, leading to early institution of therapy, reduces post operative discomfort and facilitates recovery. Because serum amyloid A (SAA) is a highly sensitive marker of inflammation, measurements of SAA and other acute phase reactants in the equine surgical patient may be valuable in assisting clinical assessment of post operative inflammation. Objective: To investigate changes in inflammatory markers after castration and to correlate levels of acute phase reactants with clinical severity of inflammation after ca...
Twenty-eight element concentrations in mane hair samples of adult riding horses determined by particle-induced X-ray emission.
Biological trace element research    October 12, 2005   Volume 107, Issue 2 135-140 doi: 10.1385/BTER:107:2:135
Asano K, Suzuki K, Chiba M, Sera K, Asano R, Sakai T.The concentrations of 28 elements (Al, Br, Ca, Cl, Co, Cu, Cr, Fe, Ga, Hg, K, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nb, Ni, P, Pb, Rb, S, Se, Si, Sr, Ti, V, Y, and Zn) were measured in mane hair by the particle-induced X-ray emission method. Except for Br, Cl, K, S, and P, the trace element concentrations in mane hair of horses are similar to literature values for human hair. The values obtained are not dependent on the horse's age, breed, and sex and could be used as reference values in the assessment of diseases and nutritional status in equines.
Association of pneumonia in foals caused by Rhodococcus equi with farm soil geochemistry.
American journal of veterinary research    October 7, 2005   Volume 63, Issue 1 95-98 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2002.63.95
Martens RJ, Cohen ND, Chaffin MK, Waskom JS.To quantify and compare geochemical factors in surface soils from horse-breeding farms with horses with pneumonia caused by Rhodococcus equi (affected farms) and horse-breeding farms with no history of pneumonia caused by R equi (unaffected farms). Methods: Soil from 24 R equi-affected farms and 21 unaffected farms. Methods: Equine veterinary practitioners throughout Texas submitted surface soil samples from areas most frequented by foals, on R equi-affected and unaffected horse-breeding farms in their practice. Soil samples were assayed for the following factors: pH, salinity, nitrate, phosph...
Effect of exercise on iron metabolism in horses.
Biological trace element research    September 20, 2005   Volume 107, Issue 1 33-42 doi: 10.1385/BTER:107:1:033
Inoue Y, Matsui A, Asai Y, Aoki F, Matsui T, Yano H.We investigated the effect of exercise on iron metabolism in horses. Four horses were walked on a mechanical walker for 1 wk (pre-exercise). They then performed moderate exercise on a high-speed treadmill in the first week of the exercise and relative high in the second week and high in the third week. Serum iron was significantly lower in the third week of exercise than in the pre-exercise. Transferrin saturation (TS) was significantly lower in the first and third weeks of exercise than in the pre-exercise. Serum haptoglobin was significantly lower in the first week of exercise than in the pr...
Comparison of two laparoscopic treatments for experimentally induced abdominal adhesions in pony foals.
American journal of veterinary research    May 15, 2004   Volume 65, Issue 5 681-686 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2004.65.681
Lansdowne JL, Bouré LP, Pearce SG, Kerr CL, Caswell JL.To compare laparoscopic dissection with-laparoscopic dissection combined with abdominal instillation of ferric hyaluronate gel for the treatment of experimentally induced adhesions in pony foals. Methods: 12 healthy pony foals. Methods: A serosal abrasion method was used to create adhesions at 4 sites on the jejunum (day 0). At day 7 laparoscopy was performed and the adhesions observed in each foal were recorded. In group-1 foals (n = 6), the adhesions were separated laparoscopically (treatment 1). In group-2 foals (n = 6), 300 mL of 0.5% ferric hyaluronate gel was infused into the abdomen aft...
A possible role for the covalent heme-protein linkage in cytochrome c revealed via comparison of N-acetylmicroperoxidase-8 and a synthetic, monohistidine-coordinated heme peptide.
Biochemistry    February 11, 2004   Volume 43, Issue 6 1656-1666 doi: 10.1021/bi035531p
Cowley AB, Lukat-Rodgers GS, Rodgers KR, Benson DR.N-Acetylmicroperoxidase-8 (1) contains heme and residues 14-21 of horse mitochondrial cytochrome c (cyt c). The two thioether bonds linking protein to heme in cyt c are present in 1, and the native axial ligand His-18 remains coordinated to iron. As an approach to probing structural or functional roles played by the double covalent heme-protein linkage in cyt c, we have initiated a study in which the properties of 1 are compared with those of a synthetic mono-His coordinated heme peptide containing a single covalent linkage (2). One consequence of the greater conformational restriction imposed...
Seminal concentrations of trace elements in various animals and their correlations.
Asian journal of andrology    June 5, 2003   Volume 5, Issue 2 101-104 
Massányi P, Trandzik J, Nad P, Toman R, Skalická M, Koréneková B.To determine the seminal concentrations of copper, zinc, iron, cadmium, lead and nickel in bulls, rams, boars, stallions and foxes and study their correlations. Methods: Semen samples were obtained, digested and analyzed by means of the atomic absorption spectrophotometer. Data were analyzed statistically with the Student's t-test and Scheffe's test using PC programs SAS and Excel. Results: The seminal copper concentration was significantly higher in ram [(2.49+/-0.18) mg/kg] and fox [(2.16+/-0.53) mg/kg] than that in bull [(1.64+/-0.21) mg/kg], boar [(1.64+/-0.28) mg/kg] and stallion (0.86 mg...
Effect of exercise on plasma ferritin concentrations: implications for the measurement of iron status.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    October 31, 2002   Issue 34 186-190 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2002.tb05416.x
Hyyppä S, Höyhtyä M, Nevalainen M, Pösö AR.Iron is of key importance for aerobic metabolism, and natural feeds of the horse are fairly rich sources of iron. Accordingly, the known incidence of iron deficiency anaemia is apparently rare in performance horses; despite this, iron deficiency in performance horses continues to be of concern to trainers and veterinarians. Effects of exercise on plasma ferritin concentrations were therefore studied in Standardbreds, Finnhorses and half-bred riding horses. Blood samples were taken after a moderate exercise test on a racetrack, a competition exercise test on a treadmill and a race. Even moderat...
Competition studies in horse spleen ferritin probed by a kinetically inert inhibitor, [Cr(TREN)(H(2)O)(OH)](2+), and a highly luminescent Tb(III) reagent.
Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry    October 17, 2002   Volume 8, Issue 1-2 195-205 doi: 10.1007/s00775-002-0409-4
Barnés CM, Petoud S, Cohen SM, Raymond KN.The ability of ferritin as an Fe(II) detoxifier and Fe(III) storage protein is limited by its ability to recognize and incorporate Fe(II), which is then oxidized and mineralized at internal protein sites. The Cr(III) amine complex [Cr(N(CH(2)CH(2)NH(2))(3)(H(2)O)(OH)](2+) [abbreviated as Cr(TREN)] is a kinetically inert inhibitor of iron incorporation and mineralization in ferritin. Unlike other inhibitors, Cr(TREN) can only exchange its two aqua/hydroxy ligands. Competition studies between Cr(TREN) and Tb(III) binding have been performed in horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) to probe uptake of Fe(I...
Concentrations of toxic metals and essential minerals in the mane hair of healthy racing horses and their relation to age.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 20, 2002   Volume 64, Issue 7 607-610 doi: 10.1292/jvms.64.607
Asano R, Suzuki K, Otsuka T, Otsuka M, Sakurai H.Concentrations of trace elements (As, Al, Pb, Cd, Hg, Se, Si, P, Na, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Cu, Zn, Mn, Cr, Ni and Mn) in the mane hair obtained from 9 female and 15 male healthy racing Thoroughbred horses aged 2-5 years were analyzed by the inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) method. No significant differences between the female and male horses were observed in the mean concentrations of those minerals. Significantly positive correlations with age were observed in Cd (r=0.546, p<0.01) and Mo (r=0.733, p<0.001). Significantly negative correlations with age were observed i...
Rapid intrachain binding of histidine-26 and histidine-33 to heme in unfolded ferrocytochrome C.
Biochemistry    January 23, 2002   Volume 41, Issue 4 1372-1380 doi: 10.1021/bi011371a
Hagen SJ, Latypov RF, Dolgikh DA, Roder H.Time-resolved spectroscopic studies of unfolded horse iron(II) cytochrome c have suggested that the imidazole side chains of His26 and His33 bind transiently to the heme iron on microsecond time scales, after photodissociation of a carbon monoxide ligand from the heme. Our studies of four variants of cytochrome c (horse wild type, horse H33N, horse H33N/H26Q, and tuna wild type), unfolded in guanidine hydrochloride at pH 6.5, demonstrate that these side chains are responsible for the observed microsecond spectral changes. As His33 and then His26 are eliminated from the horse wild-type sequence...
Metal toxicosis in horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 10, 2002   Volume 17, Issue 3 517-527 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30049-4
Casteel SW.The ubiquity and stability of metals in the environment make them unique as a pollutant or an essential dietary component. Metals are neither created nor destroyed by chemical processes but are redistributed in the environment. In combination with other elements, metal compounds and alloys are essential materials of the contemporary world. Inappropriate use or distribution in the environment leads to adverse health effects on all biologic systems, including horses. Gastrointestinal upset is a common feature of acute toxicosis with metals in general. Among the metals discussed, arsenic and inor...
Iron deficiency in stabled Dutch warmblood foals.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    October 13, 2001   Volume 15, Issue 5 482-485 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2001)0152.3.co;2
Brommer H, Sloet van Oldruitenborgh-Oosterbaan MM.Forty-three Dutch Warmblood foals were divided at random into 3 rearing groups immediately after birth: a box-rest group, a box-rest with exercise group, and a pasture group. All stabled foals (box-rest and exercise groups) were fed freshly cut grass harvested from the same pastures on which the pasture group foals were grazing. Blood samples were obtained monthly for CBC and biochemical analyses. At 1-3 months of age, the foals at pasture were active but the foals in the box-rest and exercise groups were listless. Mean hemoglobin concentrations, PCVs, blood iron concentrations, and saturation...
Effect of oral administration of excessive iron in adult ponies.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 24, 2001   Volume 218, Issue 3 400-404 doi: 10.2460/javma.2001.218.400
Pearson EG, Andreasen CB.To evaluate the potential of excess dietary iron to cause hepatic lesions similar to those described in horses with suspected iron toxicosis or hemochromatosis. Methods: Prospective study. Methods: 6 adult male ponies. Methods: 4 ponies received 50 mg of iron/kg (22.7 mg/lb) of body weight each day by oral administration of ferrous sulfate, which contained 20% elemental iron; 2 ponies received only the carrier (applesauce). Complete blood counts, serum biochemical analyses, and hepatic tissue biopsies were performed, and serum iron concentrations were measured. Blood and tissue samples were ob...
Geophagia in horses: a short note on 13 cases.
Applied animal behaviour science    February 17, 2001   Volume 71, Issue 2 119-125 doi: 10.1016/s0168-1591(00)00173-8
McGreevy PD, Hawson LA, Habermann TC, Cattle SR.Recorded in several species including humans, geophagia or soil eating has been observed in both wild and domesticated horses and has generally been regarded as an indication of nutritional deficiency or "boredom". Studies of soils consumed by different species have led to several theories as to the identity of soil constituents that stimulate geophagia. In this study, geochemical analysis of 13 equine geophagic sites from different parts of Australia was undertaken. Significantly larger concentrations of iron and copper were found in soil samples from geophagic sites when compared to paired c...
Separate sites and mechanisms for placental transport of calcium, iron and glucose in the equine placenta.
Placenta    September 14, 2000   Volume 21, Issue 7 635-645 doi: 10.1053/plac.2000.0550
Wooding FB, Morgan G, Fowden AL, Allen WR.The placenta is the only channel for transport of nutrients to the conceptus and the fetal nutrient demands increase exponentially to term. The 9 kDa calcium binding protein (calbindin, 9CBP) and the iron binding protein uteroferrin (UF) are proving to be reliable markers for epithelia that mediate active transcellular calcium and iron transport and the glucose transporter proteins (GT1 and GT3) for glucose transport by facilitated diffusion. Light and electron microscope immunocytochemistry have been used on perfusion fixed resin embedded material to establish the distribution of 9CBP, UF, GT...
Concentrations of trace minerals in the spinal cord of horses with equine motor neuron disease.
American journal of veterinary research    June 13, 2000   Volume 61, Issue 6 609-611 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2000.61.609
Polack EW, King JM, Cummings JF, Mohammed HO, Birch M, Cronin T.To compare concentrations of trace minerals in the spinal cord of horses with equine motor neuron disease (EMND) with those of horses without neurologic disease (control horses). Methods: 24 horses with EMND and 22 control horses. Methods: Spinal cord trace mineral concentrations in horses with EMND and control horses were analyzed by use of inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (calcium, phosphorus, sodium, potassium, magnesium, copper, iron, manganese, nickel, zinc, aluminum, cobalt, and chromium), atomic absorption spectrophotometry (lead and cadmium), flameless atomic abs...
The effect of shoeing on kinetics and kinematics during the stance phase.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 279-285 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05235.x
Roepstorff L, Johnston C, Drevemo S.The increasing range of of horseshoes and hoofpads makes it important to be able to evaluate their influence on performance and stress in the locomotor apparatus. The aim of this study was to describe the changes in ground reaction forces and locomotion pattern during the stance phase due to the application of a standard iron shoe. Six Swedish Warmblood horses were evaluated kinetically and kinematically before and after they were shod with an 8 mm iron shoe. Data were used to calculate ground reaction forces in the vertical and craniocaudal directions, point of application of the force, hoof ...
Structure of oxalate-substituted diferric mare lactoferrin at 2.7 A resolution.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography    October 26, 1999   Volume 55, Issue Pt 11 1792-1798 doi: 10.1107/s0907444999009439
Sharma AK, Singh TP.Lactoferrin binds two Fe(3+) and two CO(2-)(3) ions with high affinity. It can also bind other metal ions and anions. In order to determine the perturbations in the environments of the binding sites in the N and C lobes and elsewhere in the protein, the crystal structure of oxalate-substituted diferric mare lactoferrin has been determined at 2.7 A resolution. The final model has a crystallographic R factor of 21.3% for all data in the resolution range 17.0-2.7 A. The substitution of an oxalate anion does not perturb the overall structure of the protein, but produces several significant changes...
Three-dimensional structure of mare diferric lactoferrin at 2.6 A resolution.
Journal of molecular biology    June 15, 1999   Volume 289, Issue 2 303-317 doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.2767
Sharma AK, Paramasivam M, Srinivasan A, Yadav MP, Singh TP.Lactoferrin is a monomeric glycoprotein with a molecular mass of approximately 80 kDa. The three-dimensional structure of mare diferric lactoferrin (mlf) has been determined at 2.6 A resolution. The protein crystallizes in the space group P 212121with a=85.2 A, b=99.5 A, c=103.1 A with a solvent content of 55 % (v/v). The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method using human diferric lactoferrin as the model. The structure has been refined using XPLOR to a final R -factor of 0.194 for all data in the 15-2.6 A resolution range. The amino acid sequence of mlf was determined using ...
Concentrations of macro- and micro-elements in the milk of pasture-fed thoroughbred mares.
Australian veterinary journal    April 10, 1999   Volume 77, Issue 3 177-180 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1999.tb11230.x
Grace ND, Pearce SG, Firth EC, Fennessy PF.To determine the changes in Ca, P, Mg, Na, K, S, Cu, Fe and Zn concentrations of milk during the lactation in pasture-fed Thoroughbred mares and then calculate the dietary mineral requirements of the sucking foal and the lactating mare. Methods: Milk was sampled on days 1, 3, 7, 14, 21, 28 and at various times between 55 to 65, 85 to 95 and 135 to 150 days after parturition from 21 pasture-fed mares. The concentrations of macro- and micro-elements in the milk were determined by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry. Results: Concentrations (mg/L) of these elements were highest in co...
The 2.03 signal as an indicator of dinitrosyl-iron complexes with thiol-containing ligands.
Nitric oxide : biology and chemistry    December 16, 1998   Volume 2, Issue 4 224-234 doi: 10.1006/niox.1998.0180
Vanin AF, Serezhenkov VA, Mikoyan VD, Genkin MV.The parameters of EPR signal from dinitrosyl-iron complexes (DNIC) with bovine serum albumin (BSA), horse hemoglobin (Hb), and apometallothionein (apo-Mt) of horse kidney incorporating one (BSA, Hb) or two thiol-containing ligands (apo-Mt) were compared. The EPR signal from DNIC-BSA was characterized by the rhombic symmetry of g tensor at room temperature of signal recording (ambient temperature) or at 77K in the solution frozen in the presence of glycerol. In freezing of the solution in the absence of glycerin, under the exposure of DNIC-BSA to negatively charged sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) ...
Iron loading into ferritin by an intracellular ferroxidase.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics    November 4, 1998   Volume 359, Issue 1 69-76 doi: 10.1006/abbi.1998.0891
Reilly CA, Aust SD.An intracellular, membrane-bound enzyme exhibiting both p-phenylenediamine oxidase activity and ferrous iron oxidase activity was isolated with the plasma membrane fraction of horse heart and studied for its ability to load iron into ferritin. The ferroxidase activity of the tissue oxidase was stimulated approximately twofold by horse spleen apoferritin, and the iron was loaded into ferritin. The loading of iron into ferritin by the tissue oxidase was inhibited by anti-horse serum ceruloplasmin antibody. The stoichiometry of iron oxidation and oxygen consumption during iron loading into ferrit...
Erythroid hypoplasia and anemia following administration of recombinant human erythropoietin to two horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 4, 1998   Volume 212, Issue 2 244-247 
Piercy RJ, Swardson CJ, Hinchcliff KW.A Standardbred gelding and a colt were examined because of poor performance and anemia. Each horse had been given recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO; 4,000 IU) at least twice within the preceding 2 to 4 months. The horses had an Het of 16 and 24%, serum iron concentrations of 210 and 304 micrograms/dl (reference range, 73 to 140 micrograms/dl), total iron binding capacities of 239 and 321 micrograms/dl (reference range, 266 to 364 micrograms/dl), values for the percentage saturation of transferrin by iron of 87.9 and 94% (reference range, 20 to 52%), and serum ferritin concentrations of 2...
Infrared and atomic spectrometry analysis of the mineral composition of a series of equine sabulous material samples and urinary calculi.
Research in veterinary science    July 1, 1997   Volume 63, Issue 1 93-95 doi: 10.1016/s0034-5288(97)90166-1
Diaz-Espiñeira M, Escolar E, Bellanato J, De La Fuente MA.Atomic spectrometry has been used in 20 samples of equine urinary sabulous deposits in order to detect minor elements accompanying the predominant element, calcium, which is present in the form of calcium carbonate (calcite and/or vaterite). The elements measured have been (besides calcium) magnesium, sodium, potassium, iron, copper and manganese. Phosphates, sulphates and silica are frequently present as minor constituents of equine urinary sabulous deposits and uroliths, but their detection can be difficult by infrared (IR) spectroscopy in the original samples due to overlapping with the ban...
Multi-element assay of mammary secretions and sera from periparturient mares by inductively coupled argon plasma emission spectroscopy.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1997   Volume 58, Issue 4 376-378 
Rook JS, Braselton WE, Nachreiner RF, Lloyd JW, Shea ME, Shelle JE, Hitzler PR.To document and determine changes in the mineral profiles of sera and mammary secretions from a population of periparturient mares. Methods: 18 clinically normal periparturient Arabian broodmares. Methods: Inductively coupled argon emission spectroscopy was used to measure Ca, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, P, and Zn concentrations in sera and mammary secretions of periparturient mares. In addition, S was measured in mammary secretions. Results: Serum concentrations of Ca, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Na, P, and Zn remained constant throughout late pregnancy and the first 7 days of lactation. Compared with values o...
[Animal systemic iron sources utilized in vitro by staphylococci].
Medycyna doswiadczalna i mikrobiologia    January 1, 1997   Volume 49, Issue 1-2 45-53 
Lisiecki P, Sobiś-Glinkowska M, Mikucki J.Under iron-restricted conditions staphylococcal strains could utilize in vitro several animals body iron sources in form of bovine haemoglobin, hemin, lactoferrin and transferrin, ovotransferrin, horse myoglobin ferritin and cytochrome C. Spectrum of utilized iron sources was not dependent on species affiliation and kind of siderophores system. Strains isolated from clinical materials utilized largest spectrum of animal iron body sources.
Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of mare lactoferrin.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography    November 1, 1996   Volume 52, Issue Pt 6 1196-1198 doi: 10.1107/S0907444996007986
Sharma AK, Kathikeyan S, Kaur P, Singh TP, Yadav MP.Lactoferrin is an iron-binding glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 80 kDa. The protein has two iron binding sites. It has two structural lobes, each housing one Fe(3+) and the synergistic CO(3)(2-) ion. The protein was isolated from the colostrum/milk of mares maintained at National Research Centre on Equines, Hisar, India. The purified samples of the protein were crystallized using a microdialysis method. The protein was dialysed against low ionic strength buffer solution. Several crystal forms were obtained, out of which three were characterized which have cell dimensions as follows. For...