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Topic:Mule

Mules arena distinct equine species with unique physiological and behavioral characteristics. Horses, belonging to the species Equus ferus caballus, are domesticated animals known for their speed, strength, and versatility in various roles, including riding, racing, and work. Mules, on the other hand, are hybrid animals resulting from the crossbreeding of a male donkey (jack) and a female horse (mare). They inherit traits from both parents, often exhibiting the endurance and hardiness of donkeys combined with the size and strength of horses. Mules are typically sterile due to their hybrid nature, possessing 63 chromosomes, an intermediate number between horses and donkeys. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the genetic, anatomical, and behavioral differences between mules and horses, as well as the mule's role in agriculture, transportation, and recreation.
[Immunochemical investigations on the gene expression of horse serum carboxylesterase (author’s transl)].
Annales d'immunologie    February 1, 1978   Volume 129, Issue 2-3 353-365 
Méténier L, Kaminski M.Immunochemical and enzymatic analyses of horse serum carboxylesterase were carried out with respect to the existence of a silent gene. Sera with positive phenotypic expression of esterase, both heterozygotes and presumed homozygotes, were compared with:--sera with positive phenotypic expression but genotypically +/O;--sera with a negative phenotypic expression, i. e. genotypically O/O;--sera of natural +/O "hemi-zygotes": mules (donkey lacking the esterase);--positive sera heated at 60 degrees C;--positive sera after specific inhibition of enzymatic activity. Titration by immunocompetition has...
Influence of foetal genotype on the follicle-stimulating hormone:luteinizing hormone ratio of pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin.
The Journal of endocrinology    June 1, 1977   Volume 73, Issue 3 419-425 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.0730419
Stewart F, Allen WR, Moor RM.Rat testicular radioreceptor assays specific for FSH and LH were used to determine the FSH:LH ratio of PMSG produced by horse, donkey, mule and hinny conceptuses. Measurements of FSH and LH activities in PMSG produced both in vivo and in vitro by the four types of conceptuses showed that the genotype of the foetus markedly influences the FSH:LH ratio of PMSG. The FSH:LH ratio of PMSG produced by the horse conceptus was around unity whereas the ratio of PMSG produced by the donkey conceptus was as low as 0-2. Furthermore, the hybrid mule and hinny conceptuses both produced PMSG with an FSH:LH r...
Transmission of the cytochrome c structural gene in horse-donkey crosses.
The Journal of biological chemistry    February 10, 1977   Volume 252, Issue 3 830-834 
Walasek OF, Margoliash E.Donkey cytochrome c was shown to differ from horse cytochrome c by having a serine in position 47 rather than a threonine. The rest of the amino acid sequences are identical. Mules and hinnies, both males and females, carry equal amounts of horse and donkey cytochromes c. The same ratio is found in hinnies in preparations from heart tissue and from skeletal muscle. These results demonstrate that cytochrome c is transmitted in horse-donkey crosses as a simple Mendelian character which is neither sex-linked nor shows dominance. The cytochrome c gene is therefore located in the nuclear genome, as...
[Mechanisms for the expression of parental alleles of the Gpd locus in mule erythrocytes].
Genetika    January 1, 1977   Volume 13, Issue 10 1761-1766 
Serov OL, Zakiian SM, Kulichkov VA.No abstract available
Horse, ass, and mule chromosomes.
The Journal of heredity    November 1, 1976   Volume 67, Issue 6 361-367 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108753
Eldridge F, Blazak WF.Karyotypes of the horse with 64 chromosomes, the ass with 62 chromosomes, and the mule with 63 chromosomes are presented. The chromosome complements of each species and their mule hybrid are analyzed and compared.
The treatment of salmonellosis in Equidae.
Modern veterinary practice    January 1, 1976   Volume 57, Issue 1 47-51 
Morse EV, Duncan MA, Fessler JF, Page EH.Among 23 Equidae in which various treatment or management regimens for salmonellosis were observed and evaluated, 9 horses were infected with Salmonella typhimurium and 8 with S anatum; an aged mule harbored S newport, and 1 isolant was not identified. Four dual sero-type infections occurred: 3 typhimurium/anatum and 1 anatum/newington. The results obtained with various antimicrobials in therapy of peracute, acute, and chronic infections were discouraging or questionable with regard to efficacy against salmonellae per se. The antimicrobial resistance patterns of the salmonellae and coliforms f...
The contribution of the mule to scientific thought.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 359-364 
Short RV.The infertility of the mule has proved a continuing challenge to scientific thought. Since the chromosomal differences between the two parental species are so great as to render normal meiosis impossible, it is postulated that all mules and hinnies are sterile. The problem now is to explain how mules and hinnies can occasionally produce spermatozoa or ova. The appearance of the mule was sufficient to persuade the ancients that both parents, not just the male, must contribute to the make-up of the offspring. The mule has also taught us that, when the number of oocytes in the ovary is reduced, t...
The influence of fetal genotype upon endometrial cup development and PMSG and progestagen production in equids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 405-413 
Allen WR.The influence of fetal genotype upon gonadotrophin (PMSG) and progestagen production in mares and donkeys during the first half of pregnancy was examined. The production of PMSG was greatly reduced in mares carrying mule conceptuses and greatly increased in donkeys carrying hinny conceptuses. Fetal genotype had no obvious influence upon progestagen production in mares, but donkeys carrying hinny conceptuses showed extremely high peripheral plasma progestagen concentrations when serum PMSG levels were elevated. Fetal genotype profoundly influences the intensity and rate of success of the matern...
Cytogenetic studies of three equine hybrids.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 356-370 
Chandley AC, Short RV, Allen WR.A detailed investigation of testicular meiosis in a mule, a hinny and a Przewalski horse/domestic horse hybrid were made. Abnormalities of pairing were observed in the mule and hinny in most germ cells at the pachytene stage of meiotic prophase, and spermatogenesis was alsmot totally arrested. A few mature spermatozoa were recovered from the ejaculate and epididymal flushings of the hinny. The Przewalski horse/domestic horse hybrid was fertile and showed normal spermatogenesis. Chromosome banding studies showed a close homology between the karyotypes of the Prezwalski horse (Equus przewalskii,...
Studies on equine immunoglobulins. IV. Immunoglobulins of the donkey.
Immunology    January 1, 1975   Volume 28, Issue 1 187-197 
Allen PZ, Dalton EJ.Donkey IgGa was isolated in purified form from normal and immune donkey sera by column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. Isolated donkey IgGa and mixtures of (IgGa+IgGb) were used as antigens to prepare rabbit reagents specific for equine IgGa or IgGb. Antibodies present in sera obtained from a single donkey at various times during the course of hyperimmunization with BSA were isolated by immuno-adsorption. The class or subclass of immunoglobulins present among isolated, donkey anti-BSA antibodies was determined by use of specific rabbit anti-equine immunoglobulin reagents. The homologues of h...
[Study of the phylogeny of related species–horse, donkey and mule–by a labeling technic]. Biemont C, Laurent C.No abstract available
Meiosis in interspecific equine hybrids. I. The male mule (Equus asinus X E. caballus) and hinny (E. caballus X E. asinus).
Cytogenetics and cell genetics    January 1, 1974   Volume 13, Issue 4 330-341 doi: 10.1159/000130284
Chandley AC, Jones RC, Dott HM, Allen WR, Short RV.No abstract available
Development of the germ cells in the ovary of the mule and hinny.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    March 1, 1973   Volume 32, Issue 3 441-445 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0320441
Taylor MJ, Short RV.No abstract available
Further proof of genetic inactivation of the X chromosome in the female mule.
Nature    June 16, 1972   Volume 237, Issue 5355 393-396 doi: 10.1038/237393a0
Rattazzi MG, Cohen MM.No abstract available
G6PD expression and X chromosome late replication in fibroblast clones from a female mule.
Nature    June 16, 1972   Volume 237, Issue 5355 396-397 doi: 10.1038/237396a0
Ray M, Gee PA, Richardson BJ, Hamerton JL.No abstract available
Recovery of parasitic nematodes from the gastro-intestinal tract of a mule at autopsy.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1972   Volume 39, Issue 1 51-58 
Reinecke RK, Brooker D.No abstract available
Evidence for selective differences between cells with an active horse X chromosome and cells with an active donkey X chromosome in the female mule.
Nature    July 30, 1971   Volume 232, Issue 5309 349-350 doi: 10.1038/232349a0
Hook EB, Brustman LD.No abstract available
Non-random X chromosome expression in female mules and hinnies.
Nature    July 30, 1971   Volume 232, Issue 5309 312-315 doi: 10.1038/232312a0
Hamerton JL, Richardson BJ, Gee PA, Allen WR, Short RV.No abstract available
Learning in farm animals.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1971   Volume 32, Issue 6 1268-1273 doi: 10.2527/jas1971.3261268x
Kratzer DD.No abstract available
Gene expression in an interspecific hybrid: analysis of hemoglobins in donkey, horse, and mule by peptide mapping.
Biochemical genetics    February 1, 1970   Volume 4, Issue 1 73-85 doi: 10.1007/BF00484019
Isaacs WA.No abstract available
[Current status of infectious equine diseases in Latin America].
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    July 1, 1969   Volume 70, Issue 7 937-976 
Ruiz Martinez C.No abstract available
Preliminary observations on serum proteins in the horse and donkey and their interspecific hybrids.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe A    December 1, 1967   Volume 14, Issue 9 845-848 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0442.1967.tb00282.x
Bonadonna T, Fornaroli D, Succi G.No abstract available
Immunological similarity of horse, donkey and mule haemoglobins.
Nature    August 5, 1967   Volume 215, Issue 5101 630-631 doi: 10.1038/215630a0
Cradock-Watson JE.No abstract available
Microscopic lesions in the hearts of aged horses and mules.
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1967   Volume 4, Issue 2 162-185 doi: 10.1177/030098586700400206
Marcus LC, Ross JN.The hearts of 23 aged equids (18 horses and 5 mules) were examined histologically. Major findings included arteriolosclerosis and intimal bodies in small muscular arteries, myocarditis, myocardial fibrosis, fatty metamorphosis of myocardial and Purkinje fibers, myocytolysis, and basophilic (mucinous) degeneration of myocardium. Lesions less frequently seen included chronic fibrotic valvulitis, acute myocardial necrosis, sarcosporidiosis, and hemosiderosis. Single cases of malignant melanoma, cartilaginous metaplasia of the I-V septum, mineralization of connective tissue in the I-V septum, and ...
[Chromosome study in an equine family: mare, horse and mule]. Kofman-Alfaro S, Márquez Monter H, Mercado Rosas H, Funes Cravioto F.No abstract available
Functional and morphologic pathology of equine aortic insufficiency.
Pathologia veterinaria    January 1, 1966   Volume 3, Issue 2 137-158 doi: 10.1177/030098586600300203
Bishop SP, Cole CR, Smetzer DL.Twelve horses and 3 mules with grade II or louder prolonged diastolic murmurs were selected for functional and histopathologic study. Aortic insufficiency was demonstrated in all mules and in all except two horses on the basis of murmurs, jet lesions and/or pathologic and incompetent valve cusps. In 15 control animals lesions resulting in aortic insufficiency were not found. A thick fibrous band was present on all aortic valve cusps judged to be definitely insufficient. This band occurred at the line of valvular closure, parallel to the free edge, and allowed eversion of the peripheral portio...
Sex-Linkage of Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase in the Horse and Donkey.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    June 18, 1965   Volume 148, Issue 3677 1603-1604 doi: 10.1126/science.148.3677.1603
TRUJILLO JM, WALDEN B, O'NEIL P, ANSTALL HB.Distinctly different electrophoretic patterns of red cell glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were resolved from the hemolyzates of horse and donkey erythrocytes. Examination of their reciprocal hybrids, mules and hinnies, showed that the red cells of female mules and female hinnies contain both horse and donkey G-6-PD; the male mule with an X chromosome from its horse mother contained pure horse G-6-PD, whereas the male hinny with the donkey X chromosome contained pure donkey G-6-PD. These findings on the male reciprocal hybrids suggest X-linkage.
Chromosome Study Of An Alleged Fertile Mare Mule.
The Journal of heredity    January 1, 1964   Volume 55 31-38 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a107283
BENIRSCHKE K, LOW RJ, SULLIVAN MM, CARTER RM.This study is oriented towards explaining the usual infertility observed in mule and hinny species through a detailed investigation of their chromosomal structures, with a special emphasis on the instances […]
Somatic chromosomes of the horse, the donkey and their hybrids, the mule and the hinny.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    December 1, 1962   Volume 4 319-326 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0040319
BENIRSCHKE K, BROWNHILL LE, BEATH MM.No abstract available
Chromosomes of the horse, the donkey, and the mule.
Chromosoma    January 1, 1962   Volume 13 243-248 doi: 10.1007/BF00577041
TRUJILLO JM, STENIUS C, CHRISTIAN LC, OHNO S.No abstract available