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Topic:Species Comparison

Species comparison in horses involves examining the physiological, anatomical, and behavioral differences and similarities between horses and other animal species. This area of study can provide insights into the evolutionary adaptations and ecological roles of horses. Researchers often focus on aspects such as digestive systems, locomotion, sensory capabilities, and social structures to understand how horses have evolved to meet their environmental and survival needs. Comparative studies may also explore genetic differences and similarities, contributing to a broader understanding of species evolution and adaptation. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research and scholarly articles that analyze various aspects of species comparison involving horses, highlighting significant findings and methodologies used in the field.
Characterization of equine microsatellite loci, TKY102-TKY112.
Animal genetics    June 26, 2001   Volume 32, Issue 2 117-119 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2001.0700h.x
Mashima S, Tozaki T, Swinburne J, Kakoi H, Binns M, Miura N.No abstract available
Amino acid modifications in canine, equine and porcine pituitary growth hormones, identified by peptide-mass mapping.
Journal of chromatography. B, Biomedical sciences and applications    June 22, 2001   Volume 757, Issue 2 237-245 doi: 10.1016/s0378-4347(01)00154-2
Secchi C, Berrini A, Gaggioli D, Borromeo V.Modified amino acid residues in porcine, canine and equine growth hormones purified from pituitary glands were characterised by tryptic mapping and high-performance liquid chromatography with on-line coupled electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (HPLC-ESI-MS) detection. Hormones from all three species showed the same changes. Conversion of Asp128 to iso-Asp128 was a component of native hormones, while deamidation of Asn12 and Asn98 to Asp and iso-Asp, oxidation of Met4, and cyclisation to the pyroglutamyl derivative of Gln139, probably occurred in vitro, during isolation, storage or hydrol...
Morphological characteristics and distribution of the autonomic and sensitive innervation of the prostate in some animal species. Acone F, Botti M, Gazza F, Sanna M, Cappai MG, Bo Minelli L.The sensitive and autonomic innervation of the prostate was studied in some mammals (rat, rabbit, horse, donkey and bull) using gold chloride impregnation. In all the species considered the gland was supplied with conspicuous innervation located in the thickness of the capsule and in trabeculae. The autonomic innervation was constituted by ganglion cells of different sizes (small, medium and large), isolated or in groups of large ganglia also, always located along the course of nerve bundles. The sensitive nervous component, placed more frequently in the most superficial layer of the capsule, ...
Lactate-transport activity in RBCs of trained and untrained individuals from four racing species.
American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology    June 19, 2001   Volume 281, Issue 1 R19-R24 doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.2001.281.1.R19
Väihkönen LK, Heinonen OJ, Hyyppä S, Nieminen M, Pösö AR.In red blood cells (RBC) of horses, both lactate-transport activity and lactate accumulation during races vary interindividually. To study whether similar variation in lactate transport is apparent also in RBCs of other racing species, blood samples were collected from 21 reindeer, 40 horses, 31 humans, and 38 dogs. Total lactate-transport activity was measured at 10 and 30 mM concentrations, and the roles of the monocarboxylate-transporter (MCT) and the inorganic anion-exchange transporter (band-3 protein) were studied with inhibitors. In the reindeer and in one-third of the horses, lactate t...
p53 protein expression in conjunctival squamous cell carcinomas of domestic animals.
Veterinary ophthalmology    June 9, 2001   Volume 2, Issue 4 227-231 doi: 10.1046/j.1463-5224.1999.00086.x
Sironi G, Riccaboni P, Mertel L, Cammarata G, Brooks DE.The expression of p53 protein was investigated in eight formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded conjunctival squamous cell carcinomas of five horses and one cow, dog and cat each by an immunohistochemical procedure in order to evaluate protein overexpression. Anti-human p53 protein mouse monoclonal antibodies known to be cross-reactive with p53 protein of the animal species examined were used. Positive p53 nuclear immunostaining was detected in five equine, one bovine and one feline cases. Conversely, no p53 immunostaining was found in the only canine case examined. These results demonstrate a frequ...
Functional and computer modelling studies of haemoglobin from horse. The haemoglobin system of the Sardinian wild dwarf horse.
European journal of biochemistry    June 8, 2001   Volume 268, Issue 11 3313-3320 doi: 10.1046/j.1432-1327.2001.02235.x
Pellegrini M, Corda M, Manca L, Olianas A, Sanna MT, Fais A, De Rosa MC, Bertonati C, Masala B, Giardina B.A study was made of the haemoglobin (Hb) system from the Sardinian dwarf horse (Equus caballus jara), one of the last surviving wild horse species in Europe. The oxygen binding properties of the whole haemolysate and of the four different horse Hbs, separated by ion-exchange chromatography, were studied with special regard to the effect of chloride, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and lactate. Results indicate that no significant functional differences exist between the four Hb components of horse haemolysate. Moreover, the molecular basis of the intrinsically low oxygen affinity and of the weak intera...
Immunolocalization of zona pellucida antigens in the ovarian follicle of dogs, cats, horses and elephants.
Theriogenology    June 8, 2001   Volume 55, Issue 8 1705-1717 doi: 10.1016/s0093-691x(01)00514-3
Barber MR, Lee SM, Steffens WL, Ard M, Fayrer-Hosken RA.A comparative evaluation of the location of immunoreactive porcine zona pellucida (pZP) glycoproteins was performed with polyclonal rabbit anti-pZP antibodies on ovarian sections of the dog, cat, horse, and elephant. For this, formalin (light microscopy) and glutaraldehyde (transmission electron microscopy [TEM]) fixed ovarian sections were incubated with antibodies raised against highly purified pZP. Staining patterns were determined with diaminobenzidine (DAB) at the light level. The dog ZP had a distinct staining distribution that is characterized by intense staining around the periphery of...
The cartilage of the third eyelid: a comparative macroscopical and histological study in domestic animals.
Annals of anatomy = Anatomischer Anzeiger : official organ of the Anatomische Gesellschaft    April 28, 2001   Volume 183, Issue 2 165-169 doi: 10.1016/S0940-9602(01)80041-8
Schlegel T, Brehm H, Amselgruber WM.The purpose of this comparative study was to evaluate morphological differences between the cartilages of the third eyelid in dogs, cats, pigs, cows, small ruminants and horses. For that reason a total of 83 third eyelids were investigated. By the aid of a modified maceration technique, the three-dimensional form of the cartilage could be demonstrated for the first time. Generally, the cartilage consists of a long narrow appendix which is followed by a variable crossbar. In dogs the appendix is cone shaped in the basal end and extends to form a triangular plate. The former is crescent-like in ...
Estimating transmission potential in gastrointestinal nematodes (order: Strongylida).
The Journal of parasitology    April 25, 2001   Volume 87, Issue 2 442-445 doi: 10.1645/0022-3395(2001)087[0442:ETPIGN]2.0.CO;2
Medica DL, Sukhdeo MV.Microparasite virulence (the potential to cause harm in the host) is thought to be regulated by a direct trade-off with pathogen transmission potential, but it is unclear whether similar trade-offs occur in macroparasites (helminths). In this analysis, the transmission potentials of 5 nematode species (order Strongylida), known to differ in their virulence, were estimated using an index based on egg production and larval survivability. Virulence estimates were based on the minimum number of worms that cause host death. In nematode species where mature adults cause pathology (trichonematidic de...
Myofibroblasts in the mucosal layer of the uterine tube.
Italian journal of anatomy and embryology = Archivio italiano di anatomia ed embriologia    April 24, 2001   Volume 103, Issue 4 Suppl 1 259-266 
Walter I.Uterine tubes from cow, sheep, horse, pig, dog, cat, rabbit, and guinea pig were examined immunohistochemically for presence and distribution of contractile cells in the mucosal lamina propria. We tested for the presence of alpha-smooth muscle actin, tropomyosin, desmin, smooth muscle myosin (heavy chain) and cytoskeletal proteins vimentin and cytokeratin. Immunostaining for alpha-smooth muscle actin showed two distribution patterns: either positive cells were freely dispersed in the mucosal lamina propria or a distinct subepithelial layer of positive cells was seen. The first distribution pat...
Separating zebras from horses.
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice    April 21, 2001   Volume 14, Issue 2 162 
Gordon SF.No abstract available
Investigating the origins of horse domestication.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    April 21, 2001   Issue 28 6-14 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05149.x
Levine MA.Before the development of firearms, the horse was crucial to warfare and, before the invention of the steam engine, it was the fastest and most reliable form of land transport. It is crucial to the life of nomadic pastoralists on the Eurasian steppe and played a major role in the evolution of human society during the Bronze Age and Iron Age. Understanding the human past requires knowledge of the origins and development of horse husbandry. The problem of being able to identify the early stages of horse domestication is one that many researchers have grappled with for the most part unsuccessfull...
Tales from the DNA of domestic horses.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    April 18, 2001   Volume 292, Issue 5515 218-219 doi: 10.1126/science.292.5515.218
Lister AM.No abstract available
Lipid fatty acid and protein pattern of equine prostasome-like vesicles.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part B, Biochemistry & molecular biology    April 6, 2001   Volume 128, Issue 4 661-666 doi: 10.1016/s1096-4959(00)00351-1
Arienti G, Polci A, De Cosmo A, Saccardi C, Carlini E, Palmerini CA.The semen of several mammals contains vesicles of different composition and origin. We have recently reported on the presence of lipoprotein vesicles in stallion semen. To a certain extent, these resemble human prostasomes, but differ from them in amount and composition. These horse-semen prostasome-like vesicles may be important, not only in horse reproductive physiology, but also in view of stallion semen cryopreservation. In this paper, we have studied horse-semen prostasome-like vesicles and found that they possess less saturated fatty acid than human prostasomes. Moreover, their protein p...
Tetranectin-like protein in vertebrate serum: a comparative immunochemical analysis.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part B, Biochemistry & molecular biology    April 6, 2001   Volume 128, Issue 4 625-634 doi: 10.1016/s1096-4959(00)00329-8
Thougaard AV, Jaliashvili I, Christiansen M.The glycoprotein tetranectin (TN) found in human serum is a 90-kDa homotrimeric C-type lectin binding Ca2+, heparin and plasminogen kringle 4. TN is suggested as being implicated in tissue remodelling. The antigenic reactivity of putative TN was examined in serum from 14 different animal species using three sandwich enzyme immunoassays for human TN. Crab-eating macaque serum showed the strongest reaction, followed by horse and cat. Serum from cow, goat, pig, mouse and chicken reacted weakly, while dog, trout, and the amphibian and the reptile species did not react. The TN-like protein from mac...
Molecular cloning of horse Hsp90 cDNA and its comparative analysis with other vertebrate Hsp90 sequences.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    March 22, 2001   Volume 63, Issue 2 115-124 doi: 10.1292/jvms.63.115
Pepin K, Momose F, Ishida N, Nagata K.Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), a molecular chaperone, is ubiquitous and involved in numerous cellular processes. To contribute to the relatively small collection of vertebrate Hsp90 sequences in the gene data bank, we cloned and sequenced horse (Equus caballus) Hsp90 alpha and beta cDNAs. This enabled identification of horse-specific primers for development of a convenient PCR-based method that could monitor horse stress tolerance. We analyzed the sequence data comparatively and phylogenetically with other Hsp90 cDNA sequences, and identified vertebrate-specific and isoform-specific conserved ...
beta-Subunit 102-104 residues are crucial to confer FSH activity to equine LH/CG but are not sufficient to confer FSH activity to human CG.
The Journal of endocrinology    March 16, 2001   Volume 169, Issue 1 55-63 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1690055
Chopineau M, Martinat N, Galet C, Guillou F, Combarnous Y.Horse LH/CG (eLH/CG) and donkey LH/CG (dkLH/CG) are strictly LH-specific in their respective homologous species. However, both bind to the FSH receptors from non-equid species, whereas the zebra hormone (zbLH/CG) does not. The FSH/LH ratio of eLH/CG and of the alphadkbetae hybrid is about tenfold higher than that of dkLH/CG and of the alphaebetadk hybrid, showing that the betae subunit contains the structural features responsible for the high FSH activity of eLH/CG. Only six amino acid positions (51, 94, 95, 102, 103 and 106) are unique to the betae subunit when compared with the betadk and be...
Scanning electron microscopic study of the posterior ciliary veins in domestic ungulates.
Folia morphologica    March 10, 2001   Volume 60, Issue 1 21-26 
Simoens P, Van den Broeck W, Lauwers H.Vascular corrosion casts of 12 equine, 15 bovine and 50 porcine eyes were studied scanning electron microscopically for the presence of posterior ciliary veins. These veins drain a postequatorial segment of the choroid and emerge near the posterior bulbar pole. They complement the four vorticose veins that emerge near or at the equatorial zone of the eyeball and the slender choroidoretinal veins that drain the peridiscal area of the choroid. Posterior ciliary veins were observed in all equine and bovine eyes examined. In these species they presented a large variation in size, number and positi...
Evolutionary genetics. Horses domesticated multiple times.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    March 3, 2001   Volume 291, Issue 5503 412 doi: 10.1126/science.291.5503.412
Pennisi E.No abstract available
Antigenic and molecular analyses reveal that the equine rotavirus strain H-1 is closely related to porcine, but not equine, rotaviruses: interspecies transmission from pigs to horses?
Virus genes    February 24, 2001   Volume 22, Issue 1 5-20 doi: 10.1023/a:1008175716816
Ciarlet M, I a P, Conner ME, Liprandi F.We have sequenced the genes encoding the inner capsid protein VP6 and the outer capsid glycoprotein VP7 of the subgroup (SG) I equine rotavirus strain H-1 (P9[7], G5). The VP6 and VP7 proteins of the equine rotavirus strain H-1 shared a high degree of sequence and deduced amino acid identity with SG I porcine strains and serotype G5 porcine strains, respectively. Previous sequence analyses of the genes encoding the outer capsid spike protein VP4 and the nonstructural proteins NSP1 and NSP4 of equine H-1 strain also revealed a high degree of sequence and deduced amino acid homology with the pro...
Comparative studies in the promoter and exon 1 regions of tumour suppressor p53 in several mammalian species: absence of mutations in a panel of spontaneous domestic animal tumours.
Journal of veterinary medicine. A, Physiology, pathology, clinical medicine    February 24, 2001   Volume 47, Issue 10 593-597 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0442.2000.00322.x
Mayr B, Resch S, Hepperle S, Brem G, Reifinger M, Schaffner G.Tumour suppressor p53 is critical in a broad panel of tumour types in human, mouse and other mammals. Regions of the promoter and exon 1 play an important role in expression of p53. In the present study, the DNA sequences of promoter and exon 1 regions of four domestic animal species (dog, cat, horse and cattle) are determined and compared with experimental rodents (mouse, rat and hamster) and man. A broad panel of tumour types have been investigated for mutations in this regulatory area in 90 canine, 136 feline, 25 equine and 10 bovine patients. No mutation was detected in any of the tumours ...
A random amplified polymorphic DNA polymerase chain reaction technique that differentiates between Neospora species.
The Journal of parasitology    February 24, 2001   Volume 86, Issue 6 1366-1368 doi: 10.1645/0022-3395(2000)086[1366:ARAPDP]2.0.CO;2
Spencer JA, Witherow AK, Blagburn BL.Neospora caninum is a recently described coccidial parasite that was first isolated from a dog in 1988 and has subsequently been shown to infect a wide range of mammals. Neospora hughesi, a new species of this genus, has recently been isolated from the spinal cord of horses showing clinical signs of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis. The random amplified polymorphic DNA polymerase chain reaction technique is capable of differentiating between N. caninum and N. hughesi.
Aggregation behavior and electrophoretic mobility of red blood cells in various mammalian species.
Biorheology    February 24, 2001   Volume 37, Issue 5-6 417-428 
Baskurt OK, Bor-Kucukatay M, Yalcin O, Meiselman HJ.Differences of red blood cell (RBC) aggregation among various mammalian species has been previously reported for whole blood, for RBC in autologous plasma, and for washed RBC re-suspended in polymer solutions. The latter observation implies the role of cellular factors, yet comparative studies of such factors are relatively limited. The present study thus investigated RBC aggregation and RBC electrophoretic mobility (EPM) for guinea pigs, rabbits, rats, humans and horses; RBC were re-suspended in isotonic 500 kDa dextran solutions for the EPM and aggregation measurements, with aggregation stud...
Cushing’s disease: a new approach to therapy in equine and canine patients.
The British homoeopathic journal    February 24, 2001   Volume 90, Issue 1 33-36 doi: 10.1054/homp.1999.0450
Elliott M.Forty-one cases of Cushing's Disease affecting both equine and canine patients were treated with an identical mixture of two homeopathically prepared remedies (ACTH 30c and Quercus robur 30c), and the clinical improvements seen in the cases assessed. Homeopathy has been described as a medicine that can only be prescribed on the basis of individual symptoms shown, fitting the remedy to the patient, not the disease. The aim of this study was to define whether a standardised approach, using homeopathically prepared remedies, was a valid system of therapy for this disease, and if so, whether resul...
Cytogenetics of donkey chromosomes: nomenclature proposal based on GTG-banded chromosomes and depiction of NORs and telomeric sites.
Chromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology    February 24, 2001   Volume 8, Issue 8 659-670 doi: 10.1023/a:1026707002538
Raudsepp T, Christensen K, Chowdhar BP.With the expansion of comparative genome analysis across different mammals, there is an increasing need to have well-defined banded karyotypes for the species chosen for investigation. In this context, the steadily growing gene mapping data in the donkey urgently require a framework whereby alignment/comparison of genetic information can be readily made with equids and other mammalian species. Hence a GTG-banded karyotype of the donkey (Equus asinus; EAS) is presented, along with schematic drawings and nomenclature of the banded chromosomes. In addition, the most characteristic features of ind...
Widespread origins of domestic horse lineages.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    February 13, 2001   Volume 291, Issue 5503 474-477 doi: 10.1126/science.291.5503.474
Vilà C, Leonard JA, Gotherstrom A, Marklund S, Sandberg K, Liden K, Wayne RK, Ellegren H.Domestication entails control of wild species and is generally regarded as a complex process confined to a restricted area and culture. Previous DNA sequence analyses of several domestic species have suggested only a limited number of origination events. We analyzed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences of 191 domestic horses and found a high diversity of matrilines. Sequence analysis of equids from archaeological sites and late Pleistocene deposits showed that this diversity was not due to an accelerated mutation rate or an ancient domestication event. Consequently, high mtDNA se...
Isolation and characterization of an equine foamy virus.
Journal of virology    February 7, 2001   Volume 74, Issue 9 4064-4073 doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.9.4064-4073.2000
Tobaly-Tapiero J, Bittoun P, Neves M, Guillemin MC, Lecellier CH, Puvion-Dutilleul F, Gicquel B, Zientara S, Giron ML, de Thé H, Saïb A.Foamy viruses (FVs) are complex retroviruses which have been isolated from different animal species including nonhuman primates, cattle, and cats. Here, we report the isolation and characterization of a new FV isolated from blood samples of horses. Similar to other FVs, the equine foamy virus (EFV) exhibits a highly characteristic ultrastructure and induces syncytium formation and subsequent cell lysis on a large number of cell lines. Molecular cloning of EFV reveals that the general organization is that of other known FVs, whereas sequence similarity with its bovine FV counterpart is only 40%...
Absence of selective brain cooling in free-ranging zebras in their natural habitat.
Experimental physiology    February 7, 2001   Volume 85, Issue 2 209-217 
Fuller A, Maloney SK, Kamerman PR, Mitchell G, Mitchell D.We used implanted miniature data loggers to measure brain and arterial blood temperatures in three free-ranging zebras (Equus burchelli) in their natural habitat, every 5 min for 9 days. The animals experienced globe temperatures exceeding 40 C, and radiant heat load of about 1000 W m-2. Arterial blood exhibited a moderate amplitude (1.7 C) nychthemeral rhythm, with an acrophase at 19.00 h and a nadir late in the morning, at 10.00 h. Brain temperature consistently exceeded blood temperature, on average by 0.2-0.4 C, and changes in brain temperature closely tracked changes in blood temperature....
Phylogenetic analysis of partial mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase c subunit I and large ribosomal RNA sequences and nuclear internal transcribed spacer I sequences from species of Cyathostominae and Strongylinae (Nematoda, Order Strongylida), parasites of the horse.
Parasitology    January 13, 2001   Volume 121 Pt 6 649-659 doi: 10.1017/s003118200000696x
McDonnell A, Love S, Tait A, Lichtenfels JR, Matthews JB.Three nucleotide data sets, one nuclear (ITS-2) and two mitochondrial (COI and l-rRNA), have been investigated in order to determine relationships among species of Strongylinae and Cyathostominae, intestinal parasites of the horse. The data exhibited a strong mutational bias towards A and T and in the COI gene, silent sites appeared to saturate rapidly partly due to this substitution bias. Thus, the COI gene was found to be less phylogenetically informative than the l-rRNA and ITS-2 genes. Combined analysis of the l-rRNA and ITS-2 genes supported a monophyletic clade of the cyathostomes with T...
Cytogenetic localization of 44 new coding sequences in the horse.
Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society    December 29, 2000   Volume 11, Issue 12 1093-1097 doi: 10.1007/s003350010206
Godard S, Vaiman A, Schibler L, Mariat D, Vaiman D, Cribiu EP, Guérin G.The purpose of this study was to increase the number of genes assigned by in situ hybridization to equine chromosomes and thus the number of links for comparative mapping with other species. Forty-four new sequences were added to the horse cytogenetic map by FISH mapping of BAC clones containing genes (35) or ESTs (9). Three approaches were developed: use of horse BAC clones screened with (i) horse EST primers, (ii) interspecific consensus intraexonic primers, and (iii) use of goat BAC containing genes previously localized on goat chromosomes. Present data suggest that the second approach is t...
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