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1.
PLoS One ; 9(10): e110125, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25295861

ABSTRACT

Congenital hepatic fibrosis has been described as a lethal disease with monogenic autosomal recessive inheritance in the Swiss Franches-Montagnes horse breed. We performed a genome-wide association study with 5 cases and 12 controls and detected an association on chromosome 20. Subsequent homozygosity mapping defined a critical interval of 952 kb harboring 10 annotated genes and loci including the polycystic kidney and hepatic disease 1 (autosomal recessive) gene (PKHD1). PKHD1 represents an excellent functional candidate as variants in this gene were identified in human patients with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney and hepatic disease (ARPKD) as well as several mouse and rat mutants. Whereas most pathogenic PKHD1 variants lead to polycystic defects in kidney and liver, a small subset of the human ARPKD patients have only liver symptoms, similar to our horses with congenital hepatic fibrosis. The PKHD1 gene is one of the largest genes in the genome with multiple alternative transcripts that have not yet been fully characterized. We sequenced the genomes of an affected foal and 46 control horses to establish a comprehensive list of variants in the critical interval. We identified two missense variants in the PKHD1 gene which were strongly, but not perfectly associated with congenital hepatic fibrosis. We speculate that reduced penetrance and/or potential epistatic interactions with hypothetical modifier genes may explain the imperfect association of the detected PKHD1 variants. Our data thus indicate that horses with congenital hepatic fibrosis represent an interesting large animal model for the liver-restricted subtype of human ARPKD.


Subject(s)
Genetic Association Studies , Genetic Diseases, Inborn/genetics , Horses , Liver Cirrhosis/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Alleles , Animals , Breeding , Chromosome Mapping , Female , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Liver/metabolism , Male , Sequence Analysis, DNA
2.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 243(8): 1166-9, 2013 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24094265

ABSTRACT

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 7-year-old 573-kg (1,261 -lb) Swiss Warmblood gelding was evaluated because of signs of acute abdominal pain. CLINICAL FINDINGS: Physical examination revealed a markedly distended abdomen with subjectively reduced borborygmi in all abdominal quadrants. A large, gas-distended viscus was present at the pelvic brim preventing complete palpation of the abdomen per rectum. Ultrasonographic evaluation could not be safely performed in the initial evaluation because of severe signs of abdominal pain. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: Ventral midline celiotomy was performed, and right dorsal displacement of the ascending colon was corrected. Progressive signs of abdominal pain after surgery prompted repeat ventral midline celiotomy, and small intestinal incarceration in a large, radial mesojejunal rent was detected. The incarceration was reduced, but the defect was not fully accessible for repair via the celiotomy. Repair of the mesenteric defect was not attempted, and conservative management was planned after surgery; however, signs of colic returned. A standard laparoscopic approach was attempted from both flanks in the standing patient, but the small intestine could not be adequately mobilized for full evaluation of the rent. Hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery (HALS) allowed identification and reduction of jejunal incarceration and repair of the mesenteric rent. Although minor ventral midline incisional complications were encountered, the horse recovered fully. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: HALS techniques should be considered for repair of mesenteric rents in horses. In the horse of this report, HALS facilitated identification, evaluation, and repair of a large radial mesenteric rent that was not accessible from a ventral median celiotomy.


Subject(s)
Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy/veterinary , Horse Diseases/surgery , Jejunal Diseases/veterinary , Jejunum/surgery , Animals , Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy/methods , Horses , Jejunal Diseases/pathology , Jejunal Diseases/surgery , Male
3.
Vet Dermatol ; 22(1): 17-23, 2011 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20609205

ABSTRACT

Chorioptes bovis infestation is a common cause of pastern dermatitis in the horse, with a predilection in draft horses and other horses with thick hair 'feathers' on the distal limbs. The treatment of this superficial mite is challenging; treatment failure and relapse are common. Furthermore, C. bovis infestation may affect the progression of chronic pastern dermatitis (also known as chronic proliferative pastern dermatitis, chronic progressive lymphoedema and dermatitis verrucosa) in draft horses, manifesting with oedema, lichenification and excessive skin folds that can progress to verruciform lesions. An effective cure for C. bovis infestation would therefore be of great clinical value. In a prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, the efficacy of oral moxidectin (0.4 mg/kg body weight) given twice with a 3 week interval in combination with environmental treatment with 4-chloro-3-methylphenol and propoxur was tested in 19 heavily feathered horses with clinical pastern dermatitis and C. bovis infestation. Follow-up examinations over a period of 180 days revealed significantly more skin crusting in the placebo group than in the treatment group. However, no other differences in clinical signs or the numbers of mites detected were found between the two groups. The results of this study suggest that moxidectin in combination with environmental insecticide treatment as used in this study is ineffective in the treatment of C. bovis in feathered horses.


Subject(s)
Animal Husbandry , Horse Diseases/drug therapy , Insecticides/therapeutic use , Mite Infestations/veterinary , Psoroptidae , Animals , Cresols/pharmacology , Extremities , Female , Hair , Horses , Macrolides/therapeutic use , Male , Mite Infestations/drug therapy , Propoxur/pharmacology
4.
Vet Microbiol ; 144(3-4): 487-92, 2010 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20189733

ABSTRACT

The lethal toxin of Clostridium sordellii (TcsL) evokes severe, mostly fatal disease patterns like toxic shock syndrome in humans and animals. Since this large clostridial toxin-induced severe muscle damaging when injected intramuscularly into mice, we hypothesized that TcsL is also associated with equine atypical myopathy (EAM), a fatal myodystrophy of hitherto unknown etiology. Transmission electron microscopy revealed skeletal and heart muscles of EAM-affected horses to undergo degeneration ultrastructurally similar to the damage found in TcsL-treated mice. Performing immunohistochemistry, myofibers of EAM-affected horses specifically reacted with sera derived from horses with EAM as well as an antibody specific for the N-terminal part of TcsL, while both antibodies failed to bind to the myofibers of either healthy horses or those with other myopathies. The presence of TcsL in myofibers of horses with EAM suggests that it plays a role as trigger or even as lethal factor in this disease.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Toxins/isolation & purification , Clostridium Infections/veterinary , Clostridium sordellii/metabolism , Horse Diseases/microbiology , Muscular Diseases/microbiology , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Clostridium Infections/microbiology , Female , Horses , Male , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/ultrastructure , Myocardium/ultrastructure
5.
Vaccine ; 27(41): 5661-6, 2009 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19646409

ABSTRACT

Botulinum neurotoxins, predominantly serotypes C and D, cause equine botulism through forage poisoning. The C-terminal part of the heavy chain of botulinum neurotoxin types C and D (HcBoNT/C and D) was expressed in Escherichia coli and evaluated as a recombinant mono- and bivalent vaccine in twelve horses in comparison to a commercially available toxoid vaccine. A three-dose subcutaneous immunization of adult horses elicited robust serum antibody response in an ELISA using the immunogen as a capture antigen. Immune sera showed dose-dependent high potency in neutralizing specifically the active BoNT/C and D in the mouse protection assay. The aluminium hydroxide based mono- and bivalent recombinant HcBoNT/C and D vaccines were characterized by good compatibility and the ability to elicit protective antibody titers similar or superior to the commercially available toxoid vaccine.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Botulinum Toxins/immunology , Botulism/prevention & control , Adjuvants, Immunologic/administration & dosage , Aluminum Hydroxide/administration & dosage , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Antitoxins/blood , Bacterial Vaccines/administration & dosage , Botulinum Toxins/genetics , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Escherichia coli/genetics , Horses , Immunization, Secondary/methods , Injections, Subcutaneous , Male , Mice , Neutralization Tests , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Vaccines, Synthetic/administration & dosage
6.
J Vet Intern Med ; 21(1): 149-56, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17338163

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Environment and genetics influence the manifestation of recurrent airway obstruction (RAO), but the associations of specific factors with mild, moderate, and severe clinical signs are unknown. HYPOTHESIS: We hypothesized that sire, feed, bedding, time outdoors, sex, and age are associated with clinical manifestations of mild, moderate, and severe lower airway disease. ANIMALS: Direct offspring of 2 RAO-affected Warmblood stallions (F1S1, n = 172; F1S2, n = 135); maternal half-siblings of F1S1 (mHSS1, n = 66); and an age-matched, randomly chosen control group (CG, n = 33). METHODS: A standardized questionnaire was used to assess potential risk factors and to establish a horse owner assessed respiratory signs index (HOARSI 1-4, from healthy to severe) according to clinical signs of lower airway disease. RESULTS: More F1S1 and F1S2 horses showed moderate to severe clinical signs (HOARSI 3 and HOARSI 4 combined, 29.6 and 27.3%, respectively) compared with CG and mHSS1 horses (9.1 and 6.2%, respectively; contingency table overall test, P < .001). Sire, hay feeding, and age (in decreasing order of strength) were associated with more severe clinical signs (higher HOARSI), more frequent coughing, and nasal discharge. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: There is a genetic predisposition and lesser but also marked effects of hay feeding and age on the manifestation of moderate to severe clinical signs, most markedly on coughing frequency. In contrast, mild clinical signs were not associated with sire or hay feeding in our populations.


Subject(s)
Horse Diseases/etiology , Horse Diseases/genetics , Respiratory Tract Diseases/veterinary , Animals , Chronic Disease , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Horses , Male , Respiratory Tract Diseases/etiology , Respiratory Tract Diseases/genetics , Risk Factors
7.
J Clin Microbiol ; 44(12): 4444-54, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17005735

ABSTRACT

Because of the frequency of multiple antibiotic resistance, Staphylococcus species often represent a challenge in incisional infections of horses undergoing colic surgery. To investigate the evolution of antibiotic resistance patterns before and after preventative peri- and postoperative penicillin treatment, staphylococci were isolated from skin and wound samples at different times during hospitalization. Most staphylococci were normal skin commensals and belonged to the common coagulase-negative group. In some cases they turned out to be opportunistic pathogens present in wound infections. MICs were determined for 12 antibiotics, and antibiotic resistance genes were detected by microarray. At hospital admission, horses harbored staphylococci that were susceptible to antibiotics or resistant to one group of drugs, mainly due to the presence of new variants of the methicillin and macrolide resistance genes mecA and mph(C), respectively. After 3 days, the percentage of Staphylococcus isolates displaying antibiotic resistance, as well as the number of resistance genes per isolate, increased moderately in hospitalized horses without surgery or penicillin treatment but dramatically in hospitalized horses after colic surgery as well as penicillin treatment. Staphylococcus species displaying multiple resistance were found to harbor mainly genes conferring resistance to beta-lactams (mecA and blaZ), aminoglycosides [str and aac(6')-Ie-aph(2')-Ia], and trimethoprim [dfr(A) and dfr(D)]. Additional genes conferring resistance to macrolides [mph(C), erm(C), and erm(B)], tetracycline [tet(K) and tet(M)], chloramphenicol [cat(pC221) and cat(pC223)], and streptothricin (sat4) appeared in several strains. Hospitalization and preventive penicillin use were shown to act as selection agents for multidrug-resistant commensal staphylococcal flora.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Horse Diseases/microbiology , Skin/microbiology , Staphylococcal Infections/veterinary , Staphylococcus/drug effects , Staphylococcus/genetics , Animals , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Antibiotic Prophylaxis , Coagulase/biosynthesis , DNA, Bacterial/analysis , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial/genetics , Horses , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Animal , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Molecular Sequence Data , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Penicillin-Binding Proteins , Penicillins/therapeutic use , Staphylococcal Infections/microbiology , Staphylococcal Skin Infections/microbiology , Staphylococcal Skin Infections/veterinary , Staphylococcus/isolation & purification , Surgical Wound Infection/microbiology , Surgical Wound Infection/veterinary
8.
Mol Microbiol ; 57(6): 1570-81, 2005 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16135225

ABSTRACT

The cpb2 gene of beta2-toxigenic Clostridium perfringens isolated from horses, cattle, sheep, human and pigs was sequenced. The cpb2 gene of equine and other non-porcine isolates differed from porcine isolates by the absence of an adenine in a poly A tract immediately downstream of the start codon in all non-porcine C. perfringens strains. This deletion involved formation of a cryptic gene harbouring a premature stop codon after only nine amino acid codons, while the full beta2-toxin protein consists of 265 amino acids. Immunoblots carried out with antibodies directed against a recombinant beta2-toxin showed the absence of expression of the beta2-toxin in equine and the other non-porcine strains under standard culture conditions. However, treatment of C. perfringens with the aminoglycosides gentamicin or streptomycin was able to induce expression of the cpb2 gene in a representative equine strain of this group, presumably by frameshifting. The presence of the beta2-toxin was revealed by immunohistology in tissue samples of small and large intestine from horses with severe typhlocolitis that had been treated before with gentamicin. This result may explain the finding that antibiotic treatment of horses affected by beta2-toxigenic C. perfringens leads to a more accentuated and fatal progression of equine typhlocolitis. Clinical observations show a reduced appearance of strong typhlocolitis in horses with intestinal complications admitted to hospital care since the standard use of gentamicin has been abandoned. This is the first report on expression of a bacterial toxin gene by antibiotic-induced ribosomal frameshifting.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Clostridium perfringens/pathogenicity , Colitis/veterinary , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Horse Diseases/physiopathology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/genetics , Base Sequence , Cattle , Clostridium Infections/microbiology , Clostridium Infections/physiopathology , Clostridium Infections/veterinary , Clostridium perfringens/drug effects , Clostridium perfringens/genetics , Clostridium perfringens/metabolism , Colitis/microbiology , Colitis/physiopathology , Gentamicins/pharmacology , Horse Diseases/microbiology , Horses , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Streptomycin/pharmacology , Swine
9.
J Clin Microbiol ; 42(12): 5542-8, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15583279

ABSTRACT

Gram-negative, nonmotile bacteria that are catalase, oxidase, and urease positive are regularly isolated from the airways of horses with clinical signs of respiratory disease. On the basis of the findings by a polyphasic approach, we propose that these strains be classified as Nicoletella semolina gen. nov, sp. nov., a new member of the family Pasteurellaceae. N. semolina reduces nitrate to nitrite but is otherwise biochemically inert; this includes the lack of an ability to ferment glucose and other sugars. Growth is fastidious, and the isolates have a distinctive colony morphology, with the colonies being dry and waxy and looking like a semolina particle that can be moved around on an agar plate without losing their shape. DNA-DNA hybridization data and multilocus phylogenetic analysis, including 16S rRNA gene (rDNA), rpoB, and infB sequencing, clearly placed N. semolina as a new genus in the family Pasteurellaceae. In all the phylogenetic trees constructed, N. semolina is on a distinct branch displaying approximately 5% 16S rDNA, approximately 16% rpoB, and approximately 20% infB sequence divergence from its nearest relative within the family Pasteurellaceae. High degrees of conservation of the 16S rDNA (99.8%), rpoB (99.6%), and infB (99.7%) sequences exist within the species, indicating that N. semolina isolates not only are phenotypically homogeneous but also are genetically homogeneous. The type strain of N. semolina is CCUG43639(T) (DSM16380(T)).


Subject(s)
Horse Diseases/microbiology , Lung Diseases/veterinary , Pasteurellaceae Infections/veterinary , Pasteurellaceae/classification , Pasteurellaceae/isolation & purification , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/analysis , Horses , Lung Diseases/microbiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Pasteurellaceae/genetics , Pasteurellaceae/metabolism , Pasteurellaceae Infections/microbiology , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
10.
Am J Vet Res ; 64(3): 338-45, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12661875

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether volumetric capnography indices could be used to differentiate between horses without recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) and horses with RAO that were in clinical remission or that had clinically apparent RAO. ANIMALS: 70 adult Swiss Warmblood horses (20 used for pleasure riding and 50 used for dressage or show jumping). PROCEDURE: Horses were allocated to 4 groups on the basis of history, clinical signs, results of endoscopy, and cytologic findings (group 1, 21 healthy horses; group 2, 22 horses with RAO that were in remission; group 3, 16 horses with mild RAO; group 4, 11 horses with exacerbated RAO). Expiratory volume and CO2 curves were recorded by use of a computerized ultrasonic spirometer. Volumetric capnograms were plotted, and derived indices were calculated. RESULTS: Dead-space volume (VD) was calculated by use of the Bohr equation (VD(Bohr)) and for physiologic VD (VD(phys)). Ratios for VD(Bohr) to expiratory tidal volume (VT) and VD(phys) to V(T) as well as an index of effective CO2 elimination were significantly different among groups of horses. Age and use of the horses also significantly affected volumetric capnography indices. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Ratios of VD(Bohr) to VT and VD(phys) to VT as well as an index of effective CO2 elimination were sufficiently sensitive measures to distinguish between healthy horses and horses with RAO in remission. To optimize the ability of volumetric capnography indices to differentiate among horses in heterogeneous populations, it is important to account for effects of age and specific use of the horses.


Subject(s)
Airway Obstruction/complications , Airway Obstruction/veterinary , Capnography/methods , Capnography/veterinary , Horse Diseases/diagnosis , Lung Diseases/diagnosis , Lung Diseases/veterinary , Aging , Airway Obstruction/diagnosis , Animals , Female , Horses , Lung Diseases/complications , Male , Predictive Value of Tests
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