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Canine storage disease characterized by hereditary progressive neurogenic muscular atrophy: breeding experiments and clinical manifestation.
1986
Inada S. | Yamauchi C. | Igata A. | Osame M. | Izumo S.
Brachygnathia in a herd of Angus cattle.
1985
Heidari M. | Vogt D.W. | Nelson S.L.
Influences of breed, sex, and susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia on lipid composition of skeletal muscle and adipose tissue in swine.
1997
Hartmann S. | Otten W. | Kratzmair M. | Seewald M.J. | Iaizzo P.A. | Eichinger H.M.
Linkage of a microsatellite marker to the canine copper toxicosis locus in Bedlington terriers.
1997
Yuzbasiyan Gurkan V. | Blanton S.H. | Cao Y. | Ferguson P. | Li J. | Venta P.J. | Brewer G.J.
Isoelectric focusing under dissociating conditions for analysis of muscle protein from clinically normal dogs and Labrador Retrievers with hereditary myopathy.
1989
Mehta J.R. | Braund K.G. | McKerrell R.E. | Toivio Kinnucan M.
Protein profiles of whole homogenates of anconeus (slow twitch) and biceps femoris (fast twitch) muscles of clinically normal dogs and of Labrador Retrievers with hereditary myopathy (HM) were resolved on flat bed polyacrylamide isoelectric-focusing gels. Three methods of sample solubilization were performed. The solubilization buffer, with high concentrations of urea, precipitated the zwitterionic detergent, but use of the buffer containing 3% NP-40, 9.2M urea, and 0.1M arginine resulted in better resolution and stability of pH gradient. Gels of anconeus muscle from clinically normal dogs contained 2 protein bands specific to anconeus muscle, whereas gels of biceps femoris muscle from clinically normal dogs contained 3 protein bands amplified in biceps femoris muscle that were barely detectable in anconeus muscle. The staining intensity of protein bands in biceps femoris muscles from Labrador Retrievers with HM was decreased, relative to controls. The quantitative analysis of peak height ratios of biceps femoris muscle revealed significant (P less than 0.05) differences between profiles of clinically normal dogs and Labrador Retrievers with HM.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]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.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Diprosopus in a Holstein calf.
1987
Hishinuma M. | Kohnose M. | Takahashi Y. | Kanagawa H.
Study of hereditary cerebellar degeneration in cats.
1996
Inada S. | Mochizuki M. | Izumo S. | Kuriyama M. | Sakamoto H. | Kawasaki Y. | Osame M.
Laryngeal paralysis-polyneuropathy complex in young Dalmatians
1994
Braund, K.G. | Shores, A. | Cochrane, S. | Forrester, D. | Kwiecien, J.M. | Steiss, J.E.
Clinical, morphologic, and morphometric findings are reported in 14 young Dalmatians with laryngeal paralysis. Neurologic signs, including megaesophagus, were observed in 13 of 14 dogs. Electromyographic abnormalities included fibrillation potentials and positive sharp waves in laryngeal, esophageal, facial, and distal appendicular muscles. Neurogenic atrophy was detected in intrinsic laryngeal and appendicular skeletal muscles. A diffuse, generalized polyneuropathy, dominated by axonal degeneration, was observed in recurrent laryngeal and appendicular peripheral nerves. Results of quantitative studies, using single teased fiber and cross-sectional nerve preparations, indicated that changes were more severe in distal parts of peripheral nerves, with preferential loss of medium sized (5.5 to 8 micrometers) and large-caliber (8.5 to 12 micrometers) myelinated nerve fibers. Ultrastructural alterations were observed in myelinated and unmyelinated nerve fibers. The term laryngeal paralysis-polyneuropathy complex is proposed for this apparent dying-back disorder, which is clinically, electrophysiologically, and pathologically different from laryngeal paralysis in young Bouvier des Flandres and Siberian Huskies. Prognosis for Dalmatians with laryngeal paralysis-polyneuropathy complex is guarded to poor. The condition is believed to be inherited.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]DNA polymorphism analysis of hereditary multiple exostoses in horses
1989
Li, J.K.K. | Moloney, B.K. | Shupe, J.L. | Gardner, E.J. | Leone, N.C. | Elsner, Y.
Genomic DNA polymorphisms obtained by restriction fragment-length polymorphism from healthy horses and horses with hereditary multiple exostoses were analyzed. These DNA were digested by 12 restriction enzymes and were hybridized against 6 isotopically labeled oncogene probes. Hybridization was not detected with the viral oncogene, v-ras, which indicated this oncogene was absent in the equine genome. Oncogenes (c-raf-1, c-fes, c-myb, c-myc, and c-sis) were present and had similar hybridization patterns and signal intensities in DNA from healthy horses and horses with hereditary multiple exostoses. Unique and distinct restriction fragment-length polymorphisms were detected with the c-raf-1 probe only in BamHI- and PstI-digested equine DNA.
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