Analyze Diet

Topic:Laboratory Methods

Laboratory methods in equine research encompass a variety of techniques and procedures used to analyze biological samples from horses to study health, disease, genetics, and physiology. These methods include hematological analyses, biochemical assays, molecular biology techniques, and microbiological cultures. Commonly utilized laboratory techniques involve blood tests for complete blood count (CBC) and serum chemistry, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for genetic and infectious disease studies, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for detecting specific proteins or antibodies. These methods provide valuable data that contribute to understanding equine health and disease mechanisms. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the application, development, and outcomes of laboratory methods in the context of equine research.
The development of a competitive PCR-ELISA for the detection of equine herpesvirus-1.
Journal of virological methods    December 31, 2002   Volume 107, Issue 2 237-244 doi: 10.1016/s0166-0934(02)00252-5
Daly P, Doyle S.Equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) infection is of significant animal welfare and economic importance. Yet, no standardised molecular techniques are available for diagnosis or confirmation of viral infection. The purpose of this study was to develop a standardised and quantitative assay system for the reliable detection of EHV-1 infection which was capable of eliminating the likelihood of false negative results. A region within the EHV-1 glycoprotein B gene was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), cloned and subjected to site-directed mutagenesis to generate a control plasmid, amplifiable b...
The use of laser microdissection for the preparation of chromosome-specific painting probes in farm animals.
Chromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology    December 25, 2002   Volume 10, Issue 7 571-577 doi: 10.1023/a:1020914702767
Kubickova S, Cernohorska H, Musilova P, Rubes J.Laser microbeam microdissection and laser pressure catapulting procedure were used for the construction of chromosome-specific painting probes, arm-specific probes and probes for chromosomal subfragments. We report on a method for generation of fluorescence in-situ hybridization probes from laser dissected chromosomes of farm animals. So far, using the described method, a set of chromosome-specific painting probes has been obtained for all porcine chromosomes, 17 chromosomes of cattle and selected equine chromosomes. It is concluded that the laser technology appears to be a useful and powerful...
Plasma and synovial fluid endothelin-1 and nitric oxide concentrations in horses with and without joint disease.
American journal of veterinary research    December 21, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 12 1648-1654 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2002.63.1648
de la Calle J, Burba DJ, Ramaswamy CM, Hosgood G, Williams J, LeBlanc C, Moore RM.To compare plasma and synovial fluid endothelin-1 (ET-1) and nitric oxide (NO) concentrations in clinically normal horses and horses with joint disease. Methods: 36 horses with joint disease, and 15 horses without joint disease. Methods: Horses with joint disease were assigned to 1 of the 3 groups (ie, synovitis, degenerative joint disease [DJD], or joint sepsis groups) on the basis of findings on clinical and radiographic examination and synovial fluid analysis. Endothelin-1 and NO concentrations were measured in plasma from blood samples, collected from the jugular vein and ipsilateral cepha...
Myoplasmic calcium regulation in myotubes from horses with recurrent exertional rhabdomyolysis.
American journal of veterinary research    December 21, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 12 1724-1731 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2002.63.1724
Lentz LR, Valberg SJ, Herold LV, Onan GW, Mickelson JR, Gallant EM.To determine whether alterations in myoplasmic calcium regulation can be identified in muscle cell cultures (myotubes) and intact muscle fiber bundles derived from Thoroughbreds affected with recurrent exertional rhabdomyolysis (RER). Methods: 6 related Thoroughbreds with RER and 8 clinically normal (control) Thoroughbred or crossbred horses. Methods: Myotube cell cultures were grown from satellite cells obtained from muscle biopsy specimens of RER-affected and control horses. Fura-2 fluorescence was used to measure resting myoplasmic calcium concentration as well as caffeine- and 4-chloro-m-c...
Excessive degradation of type II collagen in articular cartilage in equine osteochondrosis.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    December 11, 2002   Volume 20, Issue 6 1282-1289 doi: 10.1016/S0736-0266(02)00053-0
Laverty S, Okouneff S, Ionescu M, Reiner A, Pidoux I, Webber C, Rossier Y, Billinghurst RC, Poole AR.Articular osteochondrosis (OCD) occurs in both man and animals. The etiology remains to be determined. Studies of OCD lesions in animals may provide clues as to its pathogenesis. The aim of our study was to determine whether there was evidence for increased degradation namely proteoglycan (PG) release and type II collagen cleavage in articular cartilage harvested from OCD lesions. We examined ex vivo explants at post-mortem from equine OCD lesions and macroscopically normal site and age matched cartilage. These were cultured over a 10 day period in serum-free medium. Type II collagen cleavage ...
Mapping of equine potassium chloride co-transporter (SLC12A4) and amino acid transporter (SLC7A10) and preliminary studies on associations between SNPs from SLC12A4, SLC7A10 and SLC7A9 and osmotic fragility of erythrocytes.
Animal genetics    December 5, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 6 455-459 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00907.x
Hanzawa K, Lear TL, Piumi F, Bailey E.Consensus DNA sequences from human, mouse and/or rat were used to design oligonucleotide primers for equine homologues of exons 16, 17 and 20-23 of potassium chloride co-transporter (SLC12A4) and exons 10, 11 and 3, 4, respectively, for two amino acid transporters (SLC7A10 and SLC7A9). DNA sequences of the PCR products showed high sequence identity to these regions. Equine BAC clones were obtained for SLC12A4 and SLC7A10 and mapped to equine chromosomes ECA3p13 and ECA10p15, respectively, by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) were found. Su...
Molecular characterization of the equine testis-specific protein 1 (TPX1) and acidic epididymal glycoprotein 2 (AEG2) genes encoding members of the cysteine-rich secretory protein (CRISP) family.
Gene    December 3, 2002   Volume 299, Issue 1-2 101-109 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1119(02)01018-1
Giese A, Jude R, Kuiper H, Raudsepp T, Piumi F, Schambony A, Guérin G, Chowdhary BP, Distl O, Töpfer-Petersen E, Leeb T.The cysteine-rich secretory protein (CRISP) family consists of three members called acidic epididymal glycoprotein 1 (AEG1), AEG2, and testis-specific protein 1 (TPX1), which share 16 conserved cysteine residues at their C-termini. The CRISP proteins are primarily expressed in different sections of the male genital tract and are thought to mediate cell-cell interactions of male germ cells with other cells during sperm maturation or during fertilization. Therefore, their genes are of interest as candidate genes for inherited male fertility dysfunctions and as putative quantitative trait loci fo...
Low incidence of diploidy among equine oocytes matured in vitro.
Equine veterinary journal    November 29, 2002   Volume 34, Issue 7 738-740 doi: 10.2746/042516402776250441
Lechniak D, Wieczorek M, Sosnowski J.No abstract available
Effect of (auto)phosphorylation on the kinetic behavior of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II from horse brain.
Biochimie    November 28, 2002   Volume 84, Issue 7 605-610 doi: 10.1016/s0300-9084(02)01454-2
Colavizza M, Hervagault JF.After extraction and purification, the kinetic behavior of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) from horse brain was investigated as a function of ATP and a synthetic substrate, syntide-2. Both phospho- and dephospho- forms of the enzyme obey a bi-bi random mechanism. The K(M)s for ATP (K(M,ATP)) and syntide-2 (K(M,syntide-2)) were determined as equal to 80 and 30 microM, respectively. However, the maximum reaction yield is decreased by 50% when the enzyme is (auto)phosphorylated. In addition, this phosphorylated form of the enzyme leads to the formation of a total...
Development and validation of a specific radioimmunoassay for equine osteocalcin.
Domestic animal endocrinology    November 27, 2002   Volume 24, Issue 1 31-41 doi: 10.1016/s0739-7240(02)00185-6
Carstanjen B, Sulon J, Banga-Mboko H, Beckers JF, Remy B.This study describes for the first time the development and validation of a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay (RIA) for equine osteocalcin (OC) quantification using purified equine OC as standard, tracer, and immunogen for antibody formation in rabbits. The assay allowed to measure equine serum OC levels with a sensitivity of 0.2 ng/mL. Immunoreactive serum OC values of clinically normal, different-aged horses ranged from 3.68 to 127.31 ng/mL. Intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation (CV) were 6.2 and 8.2%, respectively. Serial equine serum sample dilutions were linear. The recov...
Appearance of nitrite reducing activity of cytochrome c upon heat denaturation.
Bioscience, biotechnology, and biochemistry    November 27, 2002   Volume 66, Issue 10 2044-2051 doi: 10.1271/bbb.66.2044
Yamada S, Suruga K, Ogawa M, Hama T, Satoh T, Kawachi R, Nishio T, Oku T.The appearance of NO2- reducing activity of cytochrome c (Cyt c) upon heat denaturation was investigated with equine heart Cyt c. Denatured equine heart Cyt c (dCyt c), which was treated at 100 degrees C for 30 min, had NO2- reducing activity in the presence of dithionite and methylviologen in an aqueous solution under anaerobic conditions. In contrast, hemoglobin and myoglobin had no such activity under the same conditions. Using spectroscopic methods, we found that the appearance of this activity in the Cyt c was due to the following intramolecular changes: unfolding of the peptide chain, ex...
Survival of equine herpesvirus-4, feline herpesvirus-1, and feline calicivirus in multidose ophthalmic solutions.
Veterinary ophthalmology    November 26, 2002   Volume 5, Issue 4 263-267 doi: 10.1046/j.1463-5224.2002.00234.x
Storey ES, Gerding PA, Scherba G, Schaeffer DJ.To determine survival over time of infectious equine herpesvirus-4, feline herpesvirus-1, and feline calicivirus in three commercially available and commonly used ophthalmic solutions (eyewash, fluorescein, and proparacaine HCl). Methods: Viruses used in this study were originally isolated from eyes of animals referred to the University of Illinois. Equine herpesvirus-4 was propagated in MDBK cells and feline herpesvirus-1 and feline calicivirus in CRFK cells. Methods: After separately inoculating a designated solution with a specific titer of an individual virus, solutions were incubated per ...
Expression of biologically active recombinant equine interferon-gamma by two different baculovirus gene expression systems using insect cells and silkworm larvae.
Cytokine    November 26, 2002   Volume 20, Issue 2 63-69 doi: 10.1006/cyto.2002.1983
Wu D, Murakami K, Liu N, Inoshima Y, Yokoyama T, Kokuho T, Inumaru S, Matsumura T, Kondo T, Nakano K, Sentsui H.The full-length equine interferon-gamma (eIFN-gamma) cDNA, including the secretion signal peptide coding region, was recloned into baculovirus transfer vector pAcYM1. This vector was co-transfected with Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA or hybrid nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA into Spodoptera frugiperda cells. The recombinant viruses, named AcEIFN-gamma and HyEIFN-gamma, were then recovered. Recombinant eIFN-gamma (reIFN-gamma) was accumulated in the culture fluid of the AcEIFN-gamma or HyEIFN-gamma infected Tricoplusia ni -derived cell line, BTI TN 5B1-4, and hemolymph of ...
Serum fluoride concentrations, biochemical and histopathological changes associated with prolonged sevoflurane anaesthesia in horses.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    November 21, 2002   Volume 49, Issue 7 337-347 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0442.2002.00462.x
Driessen B, Zarucco L, Steffey EP, McCullough C, Del Piero F, Melton L, Puschner B, Stover SM.The volatile anaesthetic sevoflurane is degraded to fluoride (F-) and a vinyl ether (Compound A), which have the potential to harm kidney and liver. Whether renal and hepatic injuries can occur in horses is unknown. Cardiopulmonary, biochemical and histopathological changes were studied in six healthy thoroughbred horses undergoing 18 h of low-flow sevoflurane anaesthesia. Serum F- concentrations were measured and clinical laboratory tests performed to assess hepatic and renal function before and during anaesthesia. Necropsy specimens of kidney and liver were harvested for microscopic examinat...
Comparative study of tyrosine radicals in hemoglobin and myoglobins treated with hydrogen peroxide.
Biophysical journal    November 5, 2002   Volume 83, Issue 5 2845-2855 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(02)75293-4
Svistunenko DA, Dunne J, Fryer M, Nicholls P, Reeder BJ, Wilson MT, Bigotti MG, Cutruzzolà F, Cooper CE.The reactions of hydrogen peroxide with human methemoglobin, sperm whale metmyoglobin, and horse heart metmyoglobin were studied by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 10 K and room temperature. The singlet EPR signal, one of the three signals seen in these systems at 10 K, is characterized by a poorly resolved, but still detectable, hyperfine structure that can be used to assign it to a tyrosyl radical. The singlet is detectable as a quintet at room temperature in methemoglobin with identical spectral features to those of the well characterized tyrosyl radical in photosystem...
Quantification and distribution of equine oocyte cortical granules during meiotic maturation and after activation.
Molecular reproduction and development    November 2, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 4 451-458 doi: 10.1002/mrd.10198
Carneiro GF, Liu IK, Hyde D, Anderson GB, Lorenzo PL, Ball BA.In vitro fertilization (IVF) is being routinely used in humans and several domestic species, however, limited success has been achieved in the horse. Although immature equine oocytes are capable of completing meiosis in vitro, subsequent fertilization, and embryonic development of those oocytes are questionable. The lack of development of these oocytes could be attributed to an impaired cytoplasmic maturation. In the horse, the study of oocyte cytoplasmic maturation and post-fertilization development has been hindered by the lack of progress in IVF. In mammalian oocytes, migration of cortical ...
Myosin heavy chain-based fibre types in red cell hyper- and normovolaemic Standardbred trotters.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    October 31, 2002   Issue 34 279-282 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2002.tb05433.x
Karlström K, Essén-Gustavsson B.An assumed link between red cell hypervolaemia, an excessive amount of training and impaired performance of hypervolaemic horses has led to a theory that the muscle fibres could be affected. Myosin heavy chain (MHC)-based fibre type composition in gluteus medius muscle of red blood cell normo- (NV) and hypervolaemic (HV) Standardbred trotters was evaluated using immunohistochemistry. Muscle biopsies were obtained from 13 NV and 16 HV horses. Serial transverse sections were cut and reacted with antibodies against different isoforms of the myosin heavy chains MHCI, MHCIIA and MHCIIX. Sections we...
Comparison between glycerol and ethylene glycol for the cryopreservation of equine spermatozoa: semen quality assessment with standard analyses and with the hypoosmotic swelling test.
Reproduction, nutrition, development    October 31, 2002   Volume 42, Issue 3 217-226 doi: 10.1051/rnd:2002020
Mantovani R, Rora A, Falomo ME, Bailoni L, Vincenti L.The aims of this study were to compare glycerol (G) at customary concentrations and ethylene glycol (EG) as cryoprotectants for stallion semen in a skimmed milk (SM) extender, to test different EG concentrations and to compare the results of manual and computerized analysis with the hypoosmotic swelling (HOS) test. Ejaculates from two stallions were collected over 3 weeks (6 ejaculates per stallion), diluted in a SM based extender, divided into 4 fractions, centrifuged and diluted again to a concentration of 100 x 10(6) mL(-1) progressive motile spermatozoa (PMS) in addition with the cryoprote...
Construction of a stable non-mucoid deletion mutant of the Streptococcus equi Pinnacle vaccine strain.
Veterinary microbiology    October 18, 2002   Volume 89, Issue 4 311-321 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(02)00205-5
Walker JA, Timoney JF.Streptococcus equi causes equine strangles, a purulent lymphadenopathy of the head and neck. An avirulent, non-encapsulated strain (Pinnacle) has been used widely in North America as an intranasal vaccine. The aim of the study was to create a specific mutation of the hyaluronate synthase (hasA) gene in Pinnacle to permanently abolish the production of capsule and provide an easily recognisable genetic marker. An internal fragment of hasA was generated by PCR and cloned into pTW100 (Microscience, UK). An encapsulated revertant of Pinnacle was then transformed with the recombinant plasmid by ele...
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...
Surface plasmon resonance measurement of pH-induced responses of immobilized biomolecules: conformational change or electrostatic interaction effects?
Analytical biochemistry    October 17, 2002   Volume 309, Issue 1 85-95 doi: 10.1016/s0003-2697(02)00255-5
Paynter S, Russell DA.Recently, the observation of pH-induced conformational changes of biomolecules supported on carboxymethyldextran (CMD)-coated surfaces measured using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) has been reported. However, it is apparent that the evidence reported in the literature is ambiguous. The research presented in this paper describes investigations to study the changing SPR signal of immobilized biomolecules as a function of varying pH, to provide a detailed understanding of the origin of the pH-induced changes in the SPR profile. SPR measurements were performed with cytochrome c, concanavalin A, a...
Kinetic barriers to the folding of horse cytochrome C in the reduced state.
Biochemistry    October 16, 2002   Volume 41, Issue 42 12821-12834 doi: 10.1021/bi0204443
Bhuyan AK, Kumar R.To determine the kinetic barrier in the folding of horse cytochrome c, a CO-liganded derivative of cytochrome c, called carbonmonoxycytochrome c, has been prepared by exploiting the thermodynamic reversibility of ferrocytochrome c unfolding induced by guanidinium hydrochloride (GdnHCl), pH 7. The CO binding properties of unfolded ferrocytochrome c, studied by 13C NMR and optical spectroscopy, are remarkably similar to those of native myoglobin and isolated chains of human hemoglobin. Equilibrium unfolding transitions of ferrocytochrome c in the presence and the absence of CO observed by both e...
Lipase activity in stallion seminal plasma and the effect of lipase on stallion spermatozoa during storage at 5 degrees C.
Theriogenology    October 11, 2002   Volume 58, Issue 8 1587-1595 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)01049-x
Carver DA, Ball BA.Previous studies have demonstrated a detrimental effect of seminal plasma on the maintenance of motility of cooled equine spermatozoa; however, the mechanism for the adverse effect of seminal plasma during cooled storage remains undetermined. In goats, a glycoprotein component of bulbourethral gland secretion contains lipase activity that is detrimental to sperm motility when stored in skim milk-based extenders. The objective of the current study was to determine the amount of lipase activity in stallion seminal plasma and to determine the effect of added lipase on spermatozoal motility during...
Cytogenetic localization of 136 genes in the horse: comparative mapping with the human genome.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    October 9, 2002   Volume 13, Issue 9 524-534 doi: 10.1007/s00335-001-2137-4
Milenkovic D, Oustry-Vaiman A, Lear TL, Billault A, Mariat D, Piumi F, Schibler L, Cribiu E, Guérin G.The aim of this study was to increase the number of type I markers on the horse cytogenetic map and to improve comparison with maps of other species, thus facilitating positional candidate cloning studies. BAC clones from two different sources were FISH mapped: homologous horse BAC clones selected from our newly extended BAC library using consensus primer sequences and heterologous goat BAC clones. We report the localization of 136 genes on the horse cytogenetic map, almost doubling the number of cytogenetically mapped genes with 48 localizations from horse BAC clones and 88 from goat BAC clon...
Immunohistochemical localization of chromogranin a in the acinar cells of equine salivary glands contrasts with rodent glands.
Cells, tissues, organs    October 5, 2002   Volume 172, Issue 1 29-36 doi: 10.1159/000064389
Sato F, Kanno T, Nagasawa S, Yanaihara N, Ishida N, Hasegawa T, Iwanaga T.We investigated the existence of chromogranin A (CgA) in salivary glands of the horse by Western blotting and enzyme immunoassay (EIA) using an antiserum against a peptide sequence of equine CgA. We also compared its cellular distribution between the horse and rat salivary glands with a tyramide signal amplification immunofluorescence technique. Western blotting gave three significant immunoreactive bands (74, 56 and 48 kDa) in adrenal medulla and three major salivary glands of horses. Immunoreactivities for CgA measured by EIA in horses were 154.05 +/- 41.46, 20.32 +/- 5.59 and 4.43 +/- 2.23 ...
Different contractile effects of alpha1- and alpha2-adrenergic agonists on horse isolated common digital artery smooth muscle ring preparations in vitro.
Pharmacological research    October 4, 2002   Volume 46, Issue 4 311-316 doi: 10.1016/s104366180200169x
Cavalli M, Carcano R, Beretta C.Despite assays on ring preparations in vitro confirmed that the vasoconstrictor sympathetic control in the horse common digital artery mainly depends on alpha(1)-adrenoceptors stimulation, selective alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonists were investigated under the same experimental conditions. Both detomidine (DET) and UK 14304 differed from noradrenaline (NA) and phenylephrine (PHE) in provoking contractile effects which were slowly onsetting, concentrations-unrelated and unremovable by repeated washings. While prazosin (PRA) clearly antagonized the effects of NA and PHE, neither pre- nor post-treat...
Reclassification of equine isolates previously reported as Actinobacillus equuli, variants of A. equuli, Actinobacillus suis or Bisgaard taxon 11 and proposal of A. equuli subsp. equuli subsp. nov. and A. equuli subsp. haemolyticus subsp. nov.
International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology    October 4, 2002   Volume 52, Issue Pt 5 1569-1576 doi: 10.1099/00207713-52-5-1569
Christensen H, Bisgaard M, Olsen JE.Members of Bisgaard taxon 11 have been isolated from horses. These bacteria are of importance in the veterinary clinic and also to the medical profession, since they may be isolated from infected wounds of humans bitten by horses. Six strains from different continents were identified as taxon 11, with 16S rRNA similarities between 98.0 and 99.7%. A single isolate that represented the so-called (+)L-arabinose-positive Actinobacillus equuli isolated from a diseased foal showed 99.9% 16S rRNA similarity to the type strain of A. equuli. DNA-DNA hybridizations showed that (+)L-arabinose-positive st...
Assignment of the horse grey coat colour gene to ECA25 using whole genome scanning.
Animal genetics    October 2, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 5 338-342 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00895.x
Swinburne JE, Hopkins A, Binns MM.The dominant grey coat colour gene of horses has been mapped using a whole genome scanning approach. Samples from a large half-sibling pedigree of Thoroughbred horses were utilized in order to map the grey coat colour locus, G. Multiplex groups of microsatellite markers were developed and used to efficiently screen the horse genome at a resolution of approximately 22 cM, based on an estimated map length for the horse genome of 2720 cM. The grey gene was assigned to chromosome 25 (ECA25), one of the smaller acrocentric horse chromosomes. Based on the current state of knowledge of conserved synt...
Nucleation rate determination by a concentration pulse technique: application on ferritin crystals to show the effect of surface treatment of a substrate.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography    September 26, 2002   Volume 58, Issue Pt 10 Pt 1 1588-1592 doi: 10.1107/s0907444902014452
Tsekova D, Popova S, Nanev C.The nucleation of horse spleen ferritin (HSF) crystals on substrates was investigated using a new modification of the double pulse technique. The influence of three different structureless substrates (glass, glass covered by methyl groups and poly-L-lysin template) on the nucleation was studied. The boundaries in the phase-diagram, which separate zones of crystal nucleation and growth were obtained by keeping pH = 5.0, and using CdSO(4) as crystallizing agent. The steady-state nucleation rates were determined. The energy required for critical nuclei formation was evaluated (10(-13) erg) and th...
Correlation between the osmotic second virial coefficient and solubility for equine serum albumin and ovalbumin.
Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography    September 26, 2002   Volume 58, Issue Pt 10 Pt 1 1544-1548 doi: 10.1107/s0907444902014385
Demoruelle K, Guo B, Kao S, McDonald HM, Nikic DB, Holman SC, Wilson WW.The Haas - Drenth - Wilson (HDW) (Haas et al., 1999) theoretical model was used to correlate osmotic second virial coefficient (B) values with solubility (S) values for equine serum albumin (ESA) and ovalbumin for corresponding solution conditions. The best fit from the theoretical model was compared to experimental S versus B data. B values were experimentally measured using static light scattering. Solubilities of ESA were estimated using a sitting drop method. When the experimental data for S versus B were plotted, an excellent fit for ESA was obtained according to the HDW model. The result...