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Determination of ability of a thymidine kinase-negative deletion mutant of bovine herpesvirus-1 to cause abortion in cattle
1991
Jones, Ever | Whetstone, C.A. | Bello, L.J. | Lawrence, W.C.
The Cooper isolate of bovine herpesvirus-1, which causes abortion in cattle, was used to construct a thymidine kinase-negative (TK-) deletion mutant virus. Twelve heifers were inoculated IV at 25 to 29 weeks of pregnancy with either TK- or thymidine kinase-positive (TK+) Cooper virus. All heifers developed fevers of 1 to 2 C during the first week after inoculation. Temperatures of TK+ inoculates were slightly higher and remained above normal a few days longer than in TK- inoculates. Viremia was detected in 5 of 6 TK+ inoculates and in all 6 TK- inoculates. More virus isolations were made from nasal and vaginal swab specimens of TK+ inoculates than from swab specimens of TK- inoculates. All heifers developed virus neutralizing antibody within 14 days after inoculation and antibody titers were similar between the 2 groups. None of the TK- inoculated heifers aborted and their calves did not have neutralizing antibody at birth. Abortion occurred in 5 of 6 heifers given TK+ virus. All aborted fetuses were infected with bovine herpesvirus-1, as demonstrated by virus isolation or detection of viral antigen in fetal tissues. These results indicate that inactivation of the TK gene reduces abortifacient activity of bovine herpesvirus-1.
Show more [+] Less [-]Clinical and biochemical alterations in calves with nutritionally induced polioencephalomalacia
1990
Sager, R.L. | Hamar, D.W. | Gould, D.H.
Polioencephalomalacia (PEM) was induced in calves by feeding a semipurified, low-roughage diet of variable copper and molybdenum composition. Two formulations resulting in Cu-insufficient and Cu-sufficient forms of the diet were fed (n = 10 and 4 calves, respectively); both diets induced PEM. Clinical signs of disease developed as early as 15 days after transition to the experimental diets and included impaired vision, decreased response to external stimuli, and abnormal gait. Grossly evident cerebrocortical lesions consisted of laminar areas of cavitation and/or autofluorescence seen under UV illumination. Hepatic Cu concentration was decreased in calves fed the Cu-insufficient diet, but not below normal range. During the course of feeding either diet, rumen pH decreased, rumen volatile fatty acid concentrations increased, rumen and blood lactic acid concentrations increased, and rumen and plasma thiamine concentrations increased. The thiamine pyrophosphate effect on erythrocyte transketolase activitywas unaltered in calves of either diet group. This nutritionally induced form of PEM does not appear to be related to Cu deficiency or reduction in plasmaor rumen thiamine concentration.
Show more [+] Less [-]Interferon and 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase activities in serum and blood mononuclear leukocytes of cattle after injection of bovine interferon-alpha 1
1990
Perino, L.J. | Short, E.C. Jr | Burge, L.J. | Winter, D.A. | Fulton, R.W.
Cell extracts that were prepared from blood mononuclear leukocytes from 66 samples obtained from 6 clinically normal calves contained mean 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2',5'-oligo[A]) synthetase activity sufficient to synthesize 186 +/- 82 pmol of 2',5'-oligo(A)/h/10(6) cells. Calves had no measurable serum interferon (IFN) activity. Five calves were given IM injections of 10(4), 10(5), 5 x 10(5), 10(6), and 10(7) U of bovine IFN-alpha 1/kg of body weight at 2-week intervals. Five dosing sequences were used with a 5 x 5 Latin square design so that each calf received each dose once. Activity of 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase increased at 24 hours in response to all dosages of IFN and then declined following first-order kinetics, with an apparent half-life (t1/2) of 2.1 +/- 0.5 days. The area under the concentration-time curve for 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase increased with dose of IFN more rapidly than did peak response. Serum IFN that was measured at 1-day intervals following administration of IFN was consistently measurable only at dosages above 10(6) U of IFN/kg. The t1/2 for circulating IFN was 12.4 +/- 1.0 hours. Over all dosages, increases in 2',5'-oligo(A) synthetase activity were measurable for 3.5 days longer than were increases in IFN following IM injection of IFN. None of the calves developed detectable anti-IFN antibodies.
Show more [+] Less [-]Muscle responses of Thoroughbreds to conventional race training and detraining
1990
Foreman, J.H. | Bayly, W.M. | Allen, J.R. | Matoba, H. | Grant, B.D. | Gollnick, P.D.
Ten healthy sedentary Thoroughbreds with previous race training experience were trained conventionally for 9 weeks. Muscle biopsy samples were obtained before and after training and after 6 weeks of detraining pasture rest. Biopsy samples were obtained from the right deltoid, triceps, vastus lateralis, middle gluteal, biceps femoris, and semitendinosus muscles. The deep-frozen biopsy samples were analyzed for activities of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), 3-hydroxy-acylcoenzyme A dehydrogenase (HAD), and phosphorylase (PHOS) and for glycogen concentration. The triceps and gluteal muscle samples were also serially sectioned and stained for myofibrillar actomyosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity after alkaline (pH 10.3) and sequential acidic (pH 4.34) ATPase inactivation. Fiber types I (alkaline preincubation), IIA1, IIA2, and IIA3 (sequential acidic preincubation over 5 minutes) were identified and were evaluated for fiber-type distribution and fiber areas. Increases in response to training were observed in deltoid and vastus muscle SDH and gluteal muscle HAD activities, and deltoid muscle glycogen concentration (P < 0.05 to P < 0.01). Changes in PHOS activity were not observed. Type-IIA1, -IIA2, and -IIA3 fiber areas in triceps muscle were increased in response to training (P < 0.05 to P < 0.01). Changes in fiber-type distribution did not occur in response to training. Changes in muscle enzyme activities, glycogen concentration, fiber types, and fiber areas were not seen from posttraining to detraining. Further increases were observed when detraining values were compared with pretraining values in deltoid, triceps, vastus, gluteal, and biceps femoris muscle SDH activities and in gluteal muscle glycogen concentration (P < 0.05 to P < 0.01). It was concluded that the predominant failure to detect training-induced muscle enzyme changes, along with documentation of increases in fast-twitch muscle fiber areas, indicate that conventional Thoroughbred training is principally of a sprinting nature. A greater emphasis on longer, slow endurance work early in training might add greatly to Thoroughbred horses' abilities to withstand the rigors of sprint training.
Show more [+] Less [-]Development of wheat-sensitive enteropathy in Irish Setters: biochemical changes
1990
Hall, E.J. | Batt, R.M.
Biochemical changes in the small intestine during development of naturally acquired wheat-sensitive enteropathy of Irish Setters were investigated. To distinguish primary biochemical abnormalities from secondary effects of intestinal damage, progeny of affected dogs reared on a normal wheat-containing diet were compared with their own littermates reared on a cereal-free diet and with age-matched clinically normal Irish Setters fed the same wheat-containing diet. Peroral jejunal biopsy specimens were sequentially obtained between weaning and 1 year of age; specific activity and reorientating sucrose density-gradient distribution of organelle marker enzymes were determined. Major primary biochemical abnormalities were not detected in affected progeny. In affected dogs fed wheat, there was a selective, but secondary, loss of the brush border alkaline phosphatase and aminopeptidase N activities. This loss was associated with the development of partial villus atrophy, but represented a specific effect of dietary wheat on the brush border, not merely a nonspecific effect of mucosal damage, because other brush border enzymes, including disaccharidases, were not similarly affected. Increased soluble activities of lysosomal and peroxisomal marker enzymes late in the disease process may represent alterations in these 2 organelles as a secondary consequence of mucosal damage.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of a specific thromboxane synthetase inhibitor on thromboxane generation and excretion in healthy dogs
1990
Longhofer, S.L. | Johnson, H.C. | Culham, C.A. | Schultz, K.T. | Grauer, G.F.
A specific thromboxane synthetase inhibitor, 3-methyl-2 (3-pyridyl)-1-indoleoctanoic acid (CGS 12970) was administered orally to 6 healthy adult Beagles at a dosage of 30 mg/kg of body weight. Blood generation of thromboxane B2 and urinary excretion of thromboxane B2 were measured before and after administration of CGS 12970. Although 97 +/- 0.4% inhibition of thromboxane B2 generation was observed within 2 hours after a single dose of CGS 12970 was administered orally, an effect on urinary excretion of thromboxane B2 was not observed. Additionally, oral administration of 30 mg/kg every 12 hours resulted in 80 +/- 14% inhibition of thromboxane B2 generation but had no effect on urinary thromboxane B2 excretion.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of age-related effects on the antiviral activity of interferon and induction of 2-5A synthetase in testicular cell cultures derived from swine of various ages
1990
Bosworth, B.T. | Maclachlan, N.J.
The antiviral activity of recombinant DNA-derived bovine alpha 1-1 interferon on an established swine testicular cell line and primary testicular cell cultures derived from swine of various ages (2 days, 3 weeks, and 5 weeks) was determined. Bovine interferon induced a dose-dependent increase in 2-5A synthetase in testicular cells, regardless of the source of the cells. Furthermore, interferon inhibited replication of vesicular stomatitis virus to an equivalent extent in all testicular cell cultures. The results indicate that 2-5A synthetase is a reliable marker of interferon activity in swine testicular cell cultures and that the induction of 2-5A synthetase and antiviral effects of recombinant bovine interferon in primary testicular cell cultures are not dependent on the age of the donor animal.
Show more [+] Less [-]Comparison of DNA:DNA homology and enzymatic activity between Pasteurella haemolytica and related species
1990
Bingham, D.P. | Moore, R. | Richards, A.B.
A commercially available microbiological identification system and DNA:DNA hybridization were used to determine relationships between and within serovars 1-13 of Pasteurella haemolytica, and between P haemolytica and P multocida and 4 species of Actinobacillus. All serovars of P haemolytica that belonged to biovar A were related with mean DNA homology of 78%, whereas all serovars of P haemolytica that belonged to biovar T were related to each other with mean DNA homology of 90%. The DNA:DNA hybridization between strains of biovars A and T ranged from 3 to 13%, indicating little or no genetic relationship between the 2 biovars of P haemolytica. The DNA homology between all serovars of P haemolytica and other species of non-P haemolytica bacteria tested (P multocida and actinobacilli) was < 14%, suggestive of essentially no genetic relationship of P haemolytica with the ATCC reference strains of the genus Pasteurella or the genus Actinobacillus. Enzymatic differences were observed between P haemolytica and the other non-P haemolytica bacteria tested; however, the microbiological identification system that uses enzymatic reactions could not distinguish among biovars of P haemolytica. Results of this research support other data that suggest that biovars A and T of P haemolytica should be classified as separate species, but do not support the inclusion of either biovar A or T within the genus Actinobacillus.
Show more [+] Less [-]Spectrophotometric method for differentiation of cardiac and hepatic lactate dehydrogenase activities in dogs
1989
Aguilera-Tejero, E. | Mayer-Valor, R. | Gomez-Cardenas, G.
To differentiate the origin of high total lactate dehydrogenase (LD) activity in canine sera, a spectrophotometric method based on the preferential inhibition of cardiac LD isoenzymes by pyruvate was performed. Comparison with the electrophoretic separation of LD isoenzyme activities and determination of the hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase-to-LD ratio indicated that the method proposed gave a better discrimination between cardiac and hepatic LD activities than did the other tests.
Show more [+] Less [-]Hereditary nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia in Beagles
1988
Maggio-Price, L. | Emerson, C.L. | Hinds, T.R. | Vincenzi, F.F. | Hammond, W.R.
Three Beagles with chronic anemia and reticulocytosis were studied. The dogs originated from a large breeding colony and appeared clinically normal with the exception of splenomegaly. The PCV ranged from 30 to 39% (normal, 46 to 56%), with reticulocyte indices of 2.3 to 9.9. Red blood cells were morphologically normal, and examination of marrow aspirates revealed erythroid hyperplasia. Shortened chromium-51 RBC life-spans (7.2 to 15.4 days in anemic dogs; 22.2 to 25.2 days in control dogs) documented a hemolytic anemia. Acquired causes of hemolytic anemia were ruled out. Red blood cells had normal glycolytic enzyme activities, no evidence of unstable or abnormal hemoglobin, and had altered osmotic fragility curves. The breeding of 2 anemic dogs resulted in off-spring with anemia and reticulocytosis. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed no abnormalities in RBC membrane cytoskeletal proteins in all anemic adult dogs and in 3 offspring.
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