Analyze Diet

Topic:Secretion

Secretion in horses involves the release of various substances from cells or glands, which play roles in physiological processes and maintaining homeostasis. These secretions can include hormones, enzymes, mucus, and other biological compounds essential for digestion, metabolism, and immune function. The study of secretion in equines encompasses understanding the mechanisms of secretion, the factors influencing these processes, and their implications for equine health. This topic includes peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the regulation, function, and clinical relevance of different secretions in horses, contributing to a comprehensive understanding of equine physiology and health management.
Investigation of stimulus-secretion coupling in equine sweat gland epithelia using cell culture techniques.
The Journal of experimental biology    October 1, 1993   Volume 183 279-299 doi: 10.1242/jeb.183.1.279
Wilson SM, Pediani JD, Ko WH, Bovell DL, Kitson S, Montgomery I, Brown UM, Smith GL, Elder HY, Jenkinson DM.When sweat glands isolated from samples of horse skin were explanted and cultured under favourable conditions, they could exhibit cellular outgrowth. This growth could be maintained for 2-4 weeks and these primary cultures were then disaggregated and the resultant cell suspensions used to initiate epithelial cell lines. Secretion from intact equine sweat glands is regulated by beta 2-adrenoceptors and appears to be mediated by cyclic AMP, but there is evidence that calcium may also play a role. Adrenaline could increase the cyclic AMP content of the cultured cells and this response was mediate...
Secretory patterns and rates of gonadotropin-releasing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and luteinizing hormone revealed by intensive sampling of pituitary venous blood in the luteal phase mare.
Endocrinology    January 1, 1993   Volume 132, Issue 1 212-218 doi: 10.1210/endo.132.1.8419124
Irvine CH, Alexander SL.We used our unique nonsurgical technique for collecting pituitary venous (pit) blood to study GnRH, FSH, and LH secretion patterns in midluteal phase mares. This method does not perturb endocrine function and allows continuous monitoring of GnRH and gonadotropin (Gn) secretion, determination of the amount of GnRH perfusing gonadotropes, and direct measurements of the amounts of Gn secreted. In a total of 80 h of 5-min sampling in four mares, eight Gn peaks occurred; however, more frequent sampling was needed to define secretory events precisely. Therefore, pit blood was collected continuously ...
Ultrastructure of Brunner’s glands in the horse.
Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology    October 1, 1992   Volume 24, Issue 4 581-588 
Pfeiffer CJ, Dabareiner RM.Investigation of the duodenal submucosal glands of Brunner in the horse for the first time at the ultrastructural level has clarified some of the unique features of these equine glands. The horse is one of the very few mammals in which Brunner's glands are comprised of both mucous and serous tubuloacinar glands. Although the ultrastructural differences between the serous and mucous cell types are marked, particularly with respect to secretory granules and rough endoplasmic reticula, these cell types closely correspond to serous and mucous cells in the upper digestive system of other mammals. A...
In vitro and in vivo studies of equine prolactin secretion throughout the year.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1991   Volume 44 27-35 
Evans MJ, Alexander SL, Irvine CH, Livesey JH, Donald RA.In vitro, the prolactin response of perifused anterior pituitary cells of horses to thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) (0.1, 1.0, 10 and 100 nM), correlated significantly with hours of daylight (P less than 0.01). Baseline concentrations of prolactin also were significantly correlated with daylength (P less than 0.01). When response and baseline data were fitted by nonlinear least squares to a cosine function, the circannual phase was -0.06072 (+/- 0.02170) and -0.05560 (+/- 0.0255), respectively, which are not significantly different from that of daylength. In vivo, prolactin secretion was ...
Effect of an osmotic stimulus on the secretion of arginine vasopressin and adrenocorticotropin in the horse.
Endocrinology    June 1, 1989   Volume 124, Issue 6 3102-3108 doi: 10.1210/endo-124-6-3102
Irvine CH, Alexander SL, Donald RA.Arginine vasopressin (AVP) is released in response to changes in blood osmolality and is also a putative secretagogue for ACTH. However, it is unclear whether osmotically generated increases in AVP in the physiological range influence ACTH secretion. We have studied this question using our unique noninvasive technique for collecting pituitary venous blood in six normal conscious horses that received an iv infusion of hypertonic saline (HS; 5%, 0.07 ml/kg.min) for 45-60 min. Pituitary and jugular venous samples were collected every 5 min for 40 min before, during, and for 20 min after HS. Durin...
The effects of cortisol, vasopressin (AVP), and corticotropin-releasing factor administration on pulsatile adrenocorticotropin, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, and AVP secretion in the pituitary venous effluent of the horse.
Endocrinology    August 1, 1988   Volume 123, Issue 2 713-720 doi: 10.1210/endo-123-2-713
Livesey JH, Donald RA, Irvine CH, Redekopp C, Alexander SL.Plasma ACTH, arginine vasopressin (AVP), and alpha MSH were measured in pituitary venous effluent at 5-min intervals from five unanesthetized horses during cortisol infusion and after an iv bolus of AVP or ovine (o) CRF. In control experiments (no hormone) there was a significant overall correlation between the timing of concentration changes in ACTH and alpha MSH. Cortisol infusion increased jugular cortisol levels by 70% and was associated with a reduction in mean ACTH, AVP, and alpha MSH secretion rates and ACTH peak secretion rate, but did not alter the observed pulse frequencies of these ...
Secretion rates and short-term patterns of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone, FSH and LH throughout the periovulatory period in the mare.
The Journal of endocrinology    September 1, 1987   Volume 114, Issue 3 351-362 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1140351
Alexander SL, Irvine CH.We have developed a non-surgical technique for long-term collection of pituitary venous blood which consists of slightly diluted hypophysial portal blood into which pituitary hormones have been secreted. In these experiments jugular and pituitary venous blood samples were collected from five unmedicated, ambulatory mares at 5-min intervals for 2-6 h on 11 occasions during the 6 days surrounding the ovulatory LH peak. Jugular blood only was collected from another five periovulatory mares without pituitary cannulae. The duration of oestrus was similar in mares with and without pituitary cannulae...
Circadian, circhoral and seasonal variation in patterns of gonadotrophin secretion in geldings.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 51-58 
Hoffman LS, Adams TE, Evans JW.Blood samples were obtained from 5 mixed-breed, long-term castrated geldings during five 24-h periods between May 1984 and April 1985. Blood samples were collected, beginning at 09:00 h, at 15-min intervals for 8 h and hourly for the remaining 16 h. Plasma concentrations of LH and FSH were determined by RIA. Seasonal changes in hormone concentrations and frequency and amplitude of secretory pulses were evaluated. No diurnal variation in either LH or FSH secretion was observed: however, marked circhoral fluctuations in LH and FSH secretion were noted. Mean LH and FSH concentrations in these lon...
Fine structure of the epithelia of the vomeronasal organ of horse and cattle. A comparative study.
Cell and tissue research    January 1, 1985   Volume 240, Issue 1 41-48 doi: 10.1007/BF00217556
Taniguchi K, Mikami S.The vomeronasal organ of both horses and cattle is a tubular structure situated bilaterally at the base of the nasal septum. In frontal plane the shape of its lumen is semilunar to crescent. The sensory epithelium lining the medial wall of the lumen contains receptor, supporting and basal cells with some surface modifications in both species. In the horse, a structure similar to a microprocess was observed among the microvilli of receptor cells. In cattle, a large mass of the cytoplasm of the receptor cell occasionally protrudes to form a bleb-like structure. The supranuclear cytoplasm of the ...
[Enterohepatic cycle of bile acids and erythrocyte survival].
Veterinarno-meditsinski nauki    January 1, 1985   Volume 22, Issue 6 27-33 
Tsolov V, Tsolov A, Tsankov R.A comparative analysis is made of the correlation between the life of erythrocytes in various species of animals and some parameters of the gallbladder and its secretion. Due attention is paid to the presence of the bladder, its size, and the concentration and intensity of secretion as well as to the effect of the various bile components on the surface tension of water, the water solution of salts, and the erythrocyte membrane. It is believed that both the composition of bile and the structure of erythrocyte membrane are homeostatically determined. It has been found that the mechanism of aging...
The effects of thermal stimulation on the ultrastructure of the fundus and duct of the equine sweat gland.
Journal of anatomy    August 1, 1982   Volume 135, Issue Pt 1 13-28 
Montgomery I, Jenkinson DM, Elder HY.Sweating in the horse had little effect on the ultrastructure of the glandular duct, other than on the lumen which enlarged. The fundus secretory cells, which in the resting gland were packed with vesicles, gradually lost them as sweating progressed until, after 4 hours of activity, few remained. Sweat appeared to be largely the product of secretion (a) by fluid transport, probably involving a region of complex cellular interdigitations adjacent to the basement membrane and (b) by exocytosis of vesicles, although a secondary mechanism of vesicle loss by micro-apocrine secretion may occur. Howe...
Ultrastructural study of the development of the pars distalis (anterior pituitary) in the foal.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1982   Volume 32 583-588 
Webb PD.The pituitary glands of 4 horse embryos (41-55 days of gestation) were examined by light microscopy, and the pars distalis from 10 fetal foals (75-300 days) was examined by electron microscopy. At Day 41 the development of Rathke's pouch and the saccus infundibuli was advanced; the former had almost lost its connection with the stomodaeum and the latter had started to differentiate into infundibular process and infundibular stalk. By Day 43 Rathke's pouch was completely dissociated from the stomodaeum and its walls were beginning to show uneven growth. The ventral wall of the pouch, the future...
Antigenic analyses of tissues and excretory and secretory products from Strongylus vulgaris. Wynne E, Slocombe JO, Wilkie BN.Rabbit antisera were prepared against veronal buffered saline extracts of L4 and L5 Strongylus vulgaris, adult S. vulgaris and adult Strongylus equinus retrieved from naturally infected horses. In agar gel diffusion with these antisera, adult S vulgaris and S. equinus each appeared to have at least one unique antigen; larval S. vulgaris appeared to have two species-specific and two stage-specific antigens. There were several common antigens. Excretory and secretory products were collected also from L4 and L5 an maintained over several days in tissue culture fluid. In agar gel diffusion against...
Secretion of insulin by the nonruminant herbivore (pony) pancreas perfused in vitro.
Journal of animal science    October 1, 1979   Volume 49, Issue 4 1021-1029 doi: 10.2527/jas1979.4941021x
Holley DC, Evans JW.No abstract available
Development of pituitary and adrenal glands in the fetal horse.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    October 1, 1975   Issue 23 553-556 
Samuel CA, Allen WR, Steven DH.The various cell types in the adult anterior pituitary may be distinguished at the ultrastructural level of the sizes of the secretory granules within the cytoplasm. In the fetal adenohypophysis, with the exception of prolactin-producing cells, all types may be identified after Day 100 of gestation. Morphological evidence suggests that they are producing and secreting trophic hormones. The three constituent layers of the adrenal cortex are also discernible by Day 100 of pregnancy. The cells of the zona glomerulosa have large numbers of darkly stained inclusions within the cytoplasm. The zona f...
A preliminary survey of the secretion of certain drugs in equine sweat.
The Cornell veterinarian    July 1, 1972   Volume 62, Issue 3 406-411 
Heath GE, Stowe CM.No abstract available
Studies on the IgA system of the horse.
Immunology    September 1, 1971   Volume 21, Issue 3 443-454 
Vaerman JP, Querinjean P, Heremans JF.Equine serum and secretions were found to contain a protein which cross-reacted with an antiserum against human IgA, but not with antisera against any other human immunoglobulin. The physicochemical properties of equine IgA resembled those of human IgA. IgA was found to be the immunoglobulin having the highest secretion serum concentration ratio in equine lacteal and salivary secretions, and to be the protein produced by the majority of immunoglobulin-containing cells in the of the equine intestine.
[Histochemical studies on the secretion of human and mammalian urethral glands].
Acta histochemica    January 1, 1969   Volume 33, Issue 2 331-346 
Halbhuber KJ.No abstract available
Comparative studies on the soluble protein fractions of bovine, equine, porcine and ovine adrenal chromaffin granules.
The Biochemical journal    July 1, 1966   Volume 100, Issue 1 6C-7C doi: 10.1042/bj1000006c
Helle KB.No abstract available.
Ergothioneine in the equine ampullar secretion.
Nature    August 28, 1954   Volume 174, Issue 4426 404-405 doi: 10.1038/174404b0
LEONE E.No abstract available