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Topic:Physiology

The physiology of horses encompasses the study of the biological functions and processes that occur within the equine body. This includes the examination of various systems such as the cardiovascular, respiratory, musculoskeletal, digestive, and nervous systems. Understanding equine physiology is essential for comprehending how horses adapt to different environmental conditions, perform physical activities, and respond to health challenges. Research in this field often focuses on the mechanisms of energy metabolism, thermoregulation, and muscle function during exercise, as well as the physiological responses to stress and disease. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the diverse aspects of equine physiology, providing insights into the biological processes that support the health and performance of horses.
Mitochondrial DNA: an important female contribution to thoroughbred racehorse performance.
Mitochondrion    March 3, 2006   Volume 6, Issue 2 53-63 doi: 10.1016/j.mito.2006.01.002
Harrison SP, Turrion-Gomez JL.The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecule, carrying genes encoding for respiratory chain enzymes, is a primary candidate for demonstrating associations between genotype and athletic performance in mammalian species. In humans, variation at seven protein encoding mitochondrial loci has been implicated in influencing fitness and performance characteristics. Although thoroughbred horses are selected for racing ability, there have not been any previous reported associations between genotypes and racecourse performance. The multi-factorial nature of the inheritance of racing ability is an obvious comp...
[The art of horseshoeing–between empiricism and science].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    March 3, 2006   Volume 148, Issue 2 64-72 doi: 10.1024/0036-7281.148.2.64
Weishaupt MA, Musterle B, Bertolla R, Wehrli S, Geyer H, Wampfler B, Jordan P, Kummer M, Auer JA, Fürst A.To correctly shoe a horse requires the farriers to have a good working knowledge of postural anomalies and movement patterns, as well as of the different concepts of horseshoeing and to be able to apply the appropriate technique to every individual horse they shoe. The correct technique for specific problem cases is frequently a subject of debate amongst specialists and many theories would benefit from objective gait analyses. The case study presented examines the influence of different shoeing conditions on selected gait analysis parameters. The measurements were conducted on a Warmblood mare...
Muscular design in the equine interosseus muscle.
Journal of morphology    March 3, 2006   Volume 267, Issue 6 696-704 doi: 10.1002/jmor.10433
Soffler C, Hermanson JW.We studied the forelimb interosseus muscle in horses, Equus caballus, to determine the muscular properties inherent in its function. Some authors have speculated that the equine interosseus contains muscle fibers at birth only to undergo loss of these fibers through postnatal ontogeny. We describe the muscle fibers in eight interosseus specimens from adult horses. These fibers were studied histochemically using myosin ATPase studies and immunocytochemically using several antibodies directed against type I and type II myosin heavy chain antibodies. We determined that 95% of the fibers were type...
Exercise-induced alterations in plasma concentrations of ghrelin, adiponectin, leptin, glucose, insulin, and cortisol in horses.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 3, 2006   Volume 173, Issue 3 532-540 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2006.01.003
Gordon ME, McKeever KH, Betros CL, Manso Filho HC.Six Standardbred (STB) mares (11+/-2 years, 521+/-77 kg; means+/-SD) performed an exercise trial (EX) where they underwent an incremental exercise test (GXT) as well as a parallel control trial (CON) to test the hypothesis that short-term, high intensity exercise would alter plasma concentrations of glucose, leptin, adiponectin, ghrelin, insulin and cortisol. Plasma samples were taken before (0 min), during (last 10s at 6, 8m/s, and the velocity eliciting VO(2max)), and after exercise (2, 10, 30, 60 min; 12 and 24h post-GXT). A second set of blood samples was collected before and after an afte...
Changes in heart rate and heart rate variability in Thoroughbreds during prolonged road transportation.
American journal of veterinary research    March 2, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 3 455-462 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.3.455
Ohmura H, Hiraga A, Aida H, Kuwahara M, Tsubone H, Jones JH.To determine whether evaluation of heart rate (HR) and HR variability (HRV) during prolonged road transportation in horses provides a sensitive index of autonomic stimulation. Methods: Five 2-year-old Thoroughbreds. Methods: ECGs were recorded as horses were transported for 21 hours in a 9-horse van. Heart rate, high-frequency (HF) power, low-frequency (LF) power, and LF-to-HF ratio from Fourier spectral analyses of ECGs were calculated and compared with values recorded during a 24-hour period of stall rest preceding transportation. Results: HR, HF power, and LF power had diurnal rhythms durin...
Fractionation of calcium and magnesium in equine serum.
American journal of veterinary research    March 2, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 3 463-466 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.3.463
Lopez I, Estepa JC, Mendoza FJ, Mayer-Valor R, Aguilera-Tejero E.To establish reference values for protein-bound, ionized, and weak-acid complexed fractions of calcium and magnesium in equine serum and determine stability of ionized calcium (iCa) and ionized magnesium (iMg) in serum samples kept under various storage conditions. Methods: 28 clinically normal horses. Methods: Total calcium (tCa) and magnesium (tMg) in equine serum were fractionated by use of a micropartition system that allows separation of protein-bound calcium (pCa) and magnesium (pMg) and ultrafiltrable calcium (microCa) and magnesium (microMg) fractions. Serum concentrations of iCa and i...
Gentamicin concentrations in synovial fluid and joint tissues during intravenous administration or continuous intra-articular infusion of the tarsocrural joint of clinically normal horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 2, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 3 409-416 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.3.409
Lescun TB, Ward MP, Adams SB.To compare gentamicin concentrations achieved in synovial fluid and joint tissues during IV administration and continuous intra-articular (IA) infusion of the tarsocrural joint in horses. Methods: 18 horses with clinically normal tarsocrural joints. Methods: Horses were assigned to 3 groups (6 horses/group) and administered gentamicin (6.6 mg/kg, IV, q 24 h for 4 days; group 1), a continuous IA infusion of gentamicin into the tarsocrural joint (50 mg/h for 73 hours; group 2), or both treatments (group 3). Serum, synovial fluid, and joint tissue samples were collected for measurement of gentami...
Oestrous response and follicular development in mares after treatment with an intravaginal progesterone releasing device in association with single injections of oestradiol benzoate and PGF2alpha.
Australian veterinary journal    February 28, 2006   Volume 84, Issue 1-2 47-49 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2006.tb13126.x
Norman ST, Larsen JE, Morton JM.No abstract available
Immunohistochemical identification of lymphatic vessels in the periodontium of equine cheek teeth.
Journal of veterinary dentistry    February 24, 2006   Volume 22, Issue 4 227-232 doi: 10.1177/089875640502200402
Staszyk C, Duesterdieck KF, Gasse H, Bienert A.Immunohistochemical detection of lymphatic capillaries was performed in the periodontium of maxillary and mandibular cheek teeth from 6 horses (aged 3-23 years). Tissue sections of the periodontium were taken at 4 different horizontal levels along the long axis of the tooth. The specimens were processed for immunoreaction with anti-Prox1, in order to distinguish lymphatic endothelium from blood vascular endothelium. Lymphatic vessels were detected in all periodontal tissues except for the dental cementum. Lymphatic capillaries were most densely distributed in the gingiva compared to other tiss...
Glutathione content and glutathione peroxidase expression in in vivo and in vitro matured equine oocytes.
Molecular reproduction and development    February 24, 2006   Volume 73, Issue 5 658-666 doi: 10.1002/mrd.20469
Luciano AM, Goudet G, Perazzoli F, Lahuec C, Gérard N.The in vitro developmental competence of equine oocytes is still low in comparison with other domestic mammals. A major factor affecting the viability of cells during in vitro culture is the increased oxidative stress. Oxidative modifications could be responsible for oocyte incompetence for in vitro maturation (IVM). Cysteamine, a glutathione (GSH) synthesis enhancer, has been shown to increase intracellular GSH content and to improve embryo development when added during IVM of bovine, porcine, and ovine oocytes. The aim of the present study was (1) to determine whether equine cumulus-oocyte c...
Acute effects of prostaglandin F(2alpha) on systemic oxytocin and progesterone concentrations during the mid- or late-luteal phase in mares.
Animal reproduction science    February 24, 2006   Volume 97, Issue 1-2 63-73 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.01.009
Utt MD, Acosta TJ, Wiltbank MC, Ginther OJ.The acute effects of prostaglandin F(2alpha) (PGF) on circulating oxytocin and progesterone concentrations were characterized in mares during the mid- or late-luteal phase. Pony mares were randomly assigned to the following experimental groups based on treatment with PGF (2.5mg) or saline on Day 8 or Day 13 (Day 0=ovulation): PGF-8, PGF-13, saline-8, or saline-13 (n=7/group). Mares were fitted with indwelling, jugular vein catheters and two blood samples (-5 and 0 min) were collected prior to treatment. Treatments were administered into the jugular vein (0 min) and blood collection continued t...
The presence of androgen receptors in the epididymis and prostate of the stallion and cryptorchid horse–a preliminary study.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    February 24, 2006   Volume 171, Issue 2 373-379 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2004.11.007
Hejmej A, Wiszniewska B, Kosiniak-Kamysz K, Sadowska J, Bilińska B.Distribution of androgen receptors (ARs) in the epididymal duct and prostate of three entire stallions and one bilaterally cryptorchid horse was studied immunohistochemically using a polyclonal rabbit antiserum against the ARs. In both the healthy stallions and the cryptorchid, the epithelial cells of the epididymides showed nuclear staining for ARs. The intensity of AR-staining in the principal cells of the epididymis was stronger than that of the basal cells. In the prostate, the glandular secretory cells were moderately stained whereas the basal cells expressed weak AR-staining. Immunostain...
Pregnancy rates, LH and progesterone concentrations in mares treated with a GnRH agonist.
Animal reproduction science    February 20, 2006   Volume 97, Issue 1-2 55-62 doi: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2005.12.011
Kanitz W, Schneider F, Hoppen HO, Unger C, Nürnberg G, Becker F.The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of the GnRH agonist Buserelin given on day 10 after ovulation on pregnancy rate and concentrations of progesterone and LH. Altogether 191 warmblood mares were used for two trials. Fresh or frozen/thawed semen from 27 stallions was used for A.I. In trial A 171 mares received either Buserelin (Receptal, Hoechst, Germany, 40 microg/animal) or 10 ml 0.9% NaCl (placebo). On day 16 after A.I. pregnancy diagnosis was performed by ultrasound scanning of the uterus. For statistical analysis, data were analyzed by a mixed model, with four fixed factors ...
Kinetics of amyloid aggregation of mammal apomyoglobins and correlation with their amino acid sequences.
FEBS letters    February 17, 2006   Volume 580, Issue 6 1681-1684 doi: 10.1016/j.febslet.2006.02.018
Vilasi S, Dosi R, Iannuzzi C, Malmo C, Parente A, Irace G, Sirangelo I.In protein deposition disorders, a normally soluble protein is deposited as insoluble aggregates, referred to as amyloid. The intrinsic effects of specific mutations on the rates of protein aggregation and amyloid formation of unfolded polypeptide chains can be correlated with changes in hydrophobicity, propensity to convert alpha-helical to beta sheet conformation and charge. In this paper, we report the aggregation rates of buffalo, horse and bovine apomyoglobins. The experimental values were compared with the theoretical ones evaluated considering the amino acid differences among the sequen...
Effect of maturation stage at cryopreservation on post-thaw cytoskeleton quality and fertilizability of equine oocytes.
Molecular reproduction and development    February 16, 2006   Volume 73, Issue 5 627-637 doi: 10.1002/mrd.20432
Tharasanit T, Colenbrander B, Stout TA.Oocyte cryopreservation is a potentially valuable technique for salvaging the germ-line when a valuable mare dies, but facilities for in vitro embryo production or oocyte transfer are not immediately available. This study examined the influence of maturation stage and freezing technique on the cryopreservability of equine oocytes. Cumulus oocyte complexes were frozen at the immature stage (GV) or after maturation in vitro for 30 hr (MII), using either conventional slow freezing (CF) or open pulled straw vitrification (OPS); cryoprotectant-exposed and untreated nonfrozen oocytes served as contr...
The influence of butorphanol dose on characteristics of xylazine-butorphanol-propofol anesthesia in horses at altitude.
Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia    February 16, 2006   Volume 33, Issue 2 104-110 doi: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2005.00237.x
Garcia Lascurain AA, Sumano Lopez H, Steffey EP, Santillán Doherty P, Hernandez EN.To characterize behavioral and physiological responses to short-term, unsupplemented intravenous (IV) anesthesia in healthy horses at high altitude (2240 m), and to test the hypothesis that the dose of butorphanol modifies the response of the horse to propofol anesthesia following xylazine pre-medication. Methods: Randomized prospective butorphanol dose cross-over experimental design. Animals Eight healthy horses, 13 +/- 6 (mean +/- SD) years of age, and weighing 523 +/- 26 kg. Methods: Each horse was anesthetized three times with at least 3 weeks between each anesthesia. After collecting pre-...
Evidence of an oscillating peripheral clock in an equine fibroblast cell line and adipose tissue but not in peripheral blood.
Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology    February 15, 2006   Volume 192, Issue 7 743-751 doi: 10.1007/s00359-006-0108-7
Murphy BA, Vick MM, Sessions DR, Cook RF, Fitzgerald BP.The master mammalian pacemaker in the brain controls numerous diverse physiological and behavioral processes throughout the organism. Timing information is continually transmitted from the master clock to peripheral organs to synchronize rhythmic daily oscillations of clock gene transcripts and control local physiology. To investigate the presence of peripheral clocks in the horse, quantitative real-time RT-PCR assays were designed to detect levels of equine clock genes. Expression profiles for Per2, Bmal1 and Cry1 were first determined in a synchronized equine cell line. Subsequently, express...
Rhythm of engorgement and detachment of Anocentor nitens females feeding on horses.
Veterinary parasitology    February 14, 2006   Volume 137, Issue 3-4 316-332 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2006.01.025
Labruna MB, Amaku M.The present study evaluated the engorgement and drop-off rhythms of Anocentor nitens females feeding on horses. Drop-off rhythm was evaluated at 6h-intervals (06:00, 12:00, 18:00, and 00:00 h) on horses held in stalls or in a pasture. A new method of marking feeding female ticks (the bowknot technique) was developed to evaluate ticks on horses in pasture that attached to different parts of the horse's body. This technique was highly successful, indicating no significant interference on tick engorgement rate or final tick weight, length and reproductive capability. Horses held in the pasture du...
Development of baroreflex function and hind limb vascular reactivity in the horse fetus.
The Journal of physiology    February 9, 2006   Volume 572, Issue Pt 1 155-164 doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.105635
O'Connor SJ, Ousey JC, Gardner DS, Fowden AL, Giussani DA.This study investigated, in vivo, the mechanisms underlying the development of cardiovascular function in the horse fetus, with particular relevance to baroreflex function and hind limb vascular arterial reactivity to constrictor agonists. Under general anaesthesia, vascular catheters were inserted and a Transonic flow probe was implanted around one of the metatarsal arteries of 13 horse fetuses, either at 0.6 of gestation (n= 6) or at 0.9 of gestation (n= 7, term approximately 335 days). At least 5 days after surgery, pressor, vasoconstrictor and cardiac chronotropic responses to exogenous bo...
Effect of microcurrent electrical tissue stimulation on equine tenocytes in culture.
American journal of veterinary research    February 4, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 2 271-276 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.2.271
Lin YL, Moolenaar H, van Weeren PR, van de Lest CH.To determine effects of microcurrent electrical tissue stimulation (METS) on equine tenocytes cultured from the superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT). Methods: SDFTs were collected from 20 horses at slaughter. Methods: Tenocytes were isolated following outgrowth from explants and grown in 48-well plates. Four methods of delivering current to the tenocytes with a METS device were tested. Once the optimal method was selected, current consisting of 0 (negative control), 0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0, or 1.5 mA was applied to cells (8 wells/current intensity) once daily for 8 minutes. Cells were treated ...
Influence of gastrointestinal tract disease on pharmacokinetics of lidocaine after intravenous infusion in anesthetized horses.
American journal of veterinary research    February 4, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 2 317-322 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.2.317
Feary DJ, Mama KR, Thomasy SM, Wagner AE, Enns RM.To determine the disposition of lidocaine after IV infusion in anesthetized horses undergoing exploratory laparotomy because of gastrointestinal tract disease. Methods: 11 horses (mean +/- SD, 10.3 +/- 7.4 years; 526 +/- 40 kg). Methods: Lidocaine hydrochloride (loading infusion, 1.3 mg/kg during a 15-minute period [87.5 microg/kg/min]; maintenance infusion, 50 microg/kg/min for 60 to 90 minutes) was administered IV to dorsally recumbent anesthetized horses. Blood samples were collected before and at fixed time points during and after lidocaine infusion for analysis of serum drug concentration...
Immunohistochemical determination of the expression of endothelin receptors in bronchial smooth muscle and epithelium of healthy horses and horses affected by summer pasture-associated obstructive pulmonary disease.
American journal of veterinary research    February 4, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 2 348-357 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.2.348
Polikepahad S, Paulsen DB, Moore RM, Costa LR, Venugopal CS.To immunohistochemically determine the expression of endothelin (ET) receptors in bronchial smooth muscle and epithelium of healthy horses and horses affected by summer pasture-associated obstructive pulmonary disease (SPAOPD). Methods: Tissue specimens obtained from 8 healthy and 8 SPAOPD-affected horses. Methods: Horses were examined and assigned to healthy and SPAOPD groups. Horses were then euthanatized, and tissue specimens containing bronchi of approximately 4 to 8 mm in diameter were immediately collected from all lung lobes, fixed in zinc-formalin solution for 12 hours, and embedded in...
A comparison of the effect of forage type and level of feeding on the digestibility and gastrointestinal mean retention time of dry forages given to cattle, sheep, ponies and donkeys.
The British journal of nutrition    January 31, 2006   Volume 95, Issue 1 88-98 doi: 10.1079/bjn20051617
Pearson RA, Archibald RF, Muirhead RH.Four cattle, sheep, ponies and donkeys were fed dehydrated lucerne, early-cut hay, later-cut hay or barley straw in a Latin square-based design for four periods of 35 d. In the first sub-period animals were fed the diets ad libitum (1-21 d) and in the second sub-period they were fed the same diet restricted to 0.75 of ad libitum intake (days 22-35). Measurements of forage intake, apparent digestibilities and gastrointestinal mean retention times (MRT) were made in the last 7 d of each sub-period. Differences between species in voluntary DM intake (VDMI; g/kg live weight (LW)(0.75) and g/LW) we...
Osteocyte lacuna population densities in sheep, elk and horse calcanei.
Cells, tissues, organs    January 28, 2006   Volume 181, Issue 1 23-37 doi: 10.1159/000089966
Skedros JG.Osteocytes, the most prevalent cell type in bone, appear to communicate via gap junctions. In limb-bone diaphyses, it has been hypothesized that these cellular networks have the capacity to monitor habitual strains, which can differ significantly between cortical locations of the same bone. Regional differences in microdamage associated with prevalent/predominant strain mode (tension, compression, or shear) and/or magnitude may represent an important "variable" detected by this network. This hypothesis was indirectly addressed by examining bones subjected to habitual bending for correlations o...
Comparison of hydrolytic and conjugative biotransformation pathways in horse, cattle, pig, broiler chick, rabbit and rat liver subcellullar fractions.
Veterinary research communications    January 27, 2006   Volume 30, Issue 3 271-283 doi: 10.1007/s11259-006-3247-y
Gusson F, Carletti M, Albo AG, Dacasto M, Nebbia C.To complete a studyaimed at investigating the pattern of the basal activities of liver xenobioticmetabolizing enzymes in major and minor species intended for meat production, microsomal carboxylesterases and some conjugating enzyme activities were determined and compared in liver preparations from horses, cattle, pigs, rabbits and broiler chicks, using the rat as a reference species. Horses and broiler chicks exhibited a lower microsomal carboxylesterase activity towards indophenyl or p-nitrophenyl acetate than that measured in cattle or pig subfractions. Among food-producing species, the rate...
Expression of insulin-like growth factor binding proteins in healing tendon lesions.
Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society    January 26, 2006   Volume 24, Issue 2 183-192 doi: 10.1002/jor.20000
Dahlgren LA, Mohammed HO, Nixon AJ.he treatment of overuse tendon injuries with exogenous growth factors such as insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) may facilitate an improved return to sustained athletic function. The biological effects of IGF-I are exerted under the control of a complex of IGF receptors, binding proteins, and proteases. This IGF system includes a family of six structurally related high-affinity IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) that protect IGF-I from local proteases and restrict access of IGF-I to its receptor. This study describes the expression of the IGFBPs in flexor tendon after acute injury and during heal...
Serotonin-containing cells in the gastrointestinal tract of newborn foals and adult horses.
Anatomia, histologia, embryologia    January 26, 2006   Volume 35, Issue 1 23-27 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.2005.00633.x
Fink C, Tatar M, Failing K, Hospes R, Kressin M, Klisch K.Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT), a regulatory amine of mucosal enterochromaffin cells plays an important role in the control of gastrointestinal smooth muscle contraction and epithelial secretion. Serotonin has also been associated with gastric ulcers, diarrhoea and abdominal pain. In spite of the high incidence of these gastrointestinal disorders in newborn foals and adult horses, no data are available regarding 5-HT immunoreactive cells (i.c.) in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) of foals, and for adult horses, data are incomplete and contradictory. In this study, the distribution and r...
The redox couple of the cytochrome c cyanide complex: the contribution of heme iron ligation to the structural stability, chemical reactivity, and physiological behavior of horse cytochrome c.
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society    January 26, 2006   Volume 15, Issue 2 234-241 doi: 10.1110/ps.051825906
Schejter A, Ryan MD, Blizzard ER, Zhang C, Margoliash E, Feinberg BA.Contrary to most heme proteins, ferrous cytochrome c does not bind ligands such as cyanide and CO. In order to quantify this observation, the redox potential of the ferric/ferrous cytochrome c-cyanide redox couple was determined for the first time by cyclic voltammetry. Its E0' was -240 mV versus SHE, equivalent to -23.2 kJ/mol. The entropy of reaction for the reduction of the cyanide complex was also determined. From a thermodynamic cycle that included this new value for the cyt c cyanide complex E0', the binding constant of cyanide to the reduced protein was estimated to be 4.7 x 10(-3) L M(...
Effects of an alveolar recruitment maneuver on cardiovascular and respiratory parameters during total intravenous anesthesia in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    January 24, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 1 152-159 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.67.1.152
Wettstein D, Moens Y, Jaeggin-Schmucker N, Böhm SH, Rothen HU, Mosing M, Kästner SB, Schatzmann U.To evaluate pulmonary and cardiovascular effects of a recruitment maneuver (RM) combined with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) during total intravenous anesthesia in ponies. Methods: 6 healthy adult Shetland ponies. Methods: After premedication with detomidine (10 microg/kg, IV), anesthesia was induced with climazolam (0.06 mg/kg, IV) and ketamine (2.2 mg/kg, IV) and maintained with a constant rate infusion of detomidine (0.024 mg/kg/h), climazolam (0.036 mg/kg/h), and ketamine (2.4 mg/kg/h). The RM was preceded by an incremental PEEP titration and followed by a decremental PEEP titrati...
Equine CCL11 induces eosinophil cytoskeletal reorganization and activation.
Inflammation research : official journal of the European Histamine Research Society ... [et al.]    January 24, 2006   Volume 55, Issue 1 46-52 doi: 10.1007/s00011-005-0007-3
Weston MC, Collins ME, Cunningham FM.To assess the biological effects of purified recombinant equine CCL11 on equine eosinophil function. Methods: Following stimulation of eosinophils from normal horses, the polymerised form of actin was measured by flow cytometry using fluorescently labelled phalloidin. Migration was determined in a 96 well plate chemotaxis assay using 8 microm pore membranes, and adherence of eosinophils to serum-coated plastic was assessed using a colorimetric assay for eosinophil peroxidase. Superoxide generation was measured by the reduction of cytochrome C in a colorimetric assay. Results: Equine CCL11 indu...