Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Merino wether weaners were exposed to toxic lupin stubbles for periods of one, two and six to nine weeks, and the effect on their liver copper, selenium and zinc concentrations studied. After the one week period there was a slight decrease in liver copper and selenium concentrations in sheep severely affected with lupinosis. This was attributed to loss of these elements from necrotic cells, and greatly increased quantities of fat in the liver. In the same period liver zinc concentrations declined and were negatively correlated with the degree of liver injury. After two weeks or more of exposure to toxic lupins a positive correlation existed between both the liver copper and selenium concentrations, and the degree of liver injury. Furthermore, total liver copper and selenium levels were also positively correlated with the degree of liver injury. Liver zinc concentrations were negatively correlated with the degree of liver injury. It is suggested that when the liver is under the influence of the toxins causing lupinosis for more than two weeks, it stores copper and selenium, and loses zinc.
Vet Rec 1979 Nov 10
PMID:The effect of lupinosis on liver copper, selenium and zinc concentrations in merino sheep. 53 49

Resistance of lambs to neonatal diseases has been shown to be related to their serum immunoglobulin levels. These may be estimated in the laboratory by the zinc sulphate turbidity test (ZSTT). An experiment was designed to evaluate the optical refractometer, a relatively simple and inexpensive piece of equipment which measures the refractive index of a serum sample and thus provides an estimate of its total protein content. Refractometer readings of neonatal lamb sera were found to be closely correlated to their ZSTT readings (r = 0.89). The refractometer appears eminently suited to farm use avoiding elaborate and time consuming laboratory procedures. The limitations of the tests are discussed.
Vet Rec 1978 Mar 11
PMID:Evaluation of the optical refractometer for lamb serum immunoglobulin estimation. 64 99

Alterations in plasma copper and zinc concentrations were associated with the onset and course of several diseases in sheep and cattle. Plasma Cu concentration rose as plasma Zn declined. The pattern of these changes was similar to those reported in non-ruminant animals and man.
Vet Rec 1976 Nov 13
PMID:Modulation of plasma copper and zinc concentrations by disease states in ruminants. 99 84

A refractometer method for use on the farm, by the practising veterinary surgeon, to allow estimation of immunoglobulin levels of neonatal calf and lamb plasma is described. The results show that a good correlation exists between values obtained by this method and those obtained by the standard zinc sulphate turbidity method.
Vet Rec 1975 Feb 22
PMID:A modified refractometer method as a practical aid to the epidemiological investigation of disease in the neonatal ruminant. 111 85

Two similar groups of 14 calves were housed and fed identically in individual pens on a calf-rearing farm. The groups were balanced for weight and immunological status as determined by zinc sulphate turbidity values. When an outbreak of enteric and respiratory disease occurred one group was treated with 20 mg chlortetracycline hydrochloride/kg bodyweight daily for seven consecutive days, by adding the active ingredient to the milk replacer, while the other group was left untreated. Both groups received additional therapy as required. The calves were examined daily during the period of treatment and the clinical observations were assessed and analysed statistically. There was a significant difference between the clinical scores of the two groups on the second day of treatment (P less than 0.05) and on all subsequent days (P less than 0.01) indicating that the calves receiving chlortetracycline hydrochloride were less affected by the disease outbreak. The abnormal enteric and respiratory signs were associated with several potential pathogens including bacteria, viruses and protozoa. The treatment was therefore effective against enteric and respiratory disease involving several organisms.
Vet Rec 1990 Sep 22
PMID:Clinical efficacy of chlortetracycline hydrochloride administered in milk replacer to calves. 212 75

This study examined the effects of chronic corticosterone (CORT) treatment on the morphology of two physiologically different muscles. Nerve terminals from the slow twitch soleus (SOL) and fast twitch extensor digitorum longus (EDL) of Fischer 344 rats were stained using the zinc iodide osmium (ZIO) technique. Nerve terminal area, perimeter, and longitudinal extent length were measured using computer-aided morphometry. Slow and fast muscle fibers from animals which received 5-10 mg CORT per day for 3 months were atrophied compared with controls. Treated animals failed to gain weight during the study, while controls gained 37%. Adrenal weights in treated animals were 30% less than controls, after correction for body weight. Morphological parameters for SOL nerve terminals were generally larger in the CORT group, while EDL nerve terminals from the CORT group did not differ significantly from controls. Soleus nerve terminal area was 43% greater, perimeter 14% longer, and longitudinal extent length 18% longer than the control nerve terminals. This study demonstrates a greater effect of CORT treatment on slow twitch muscle than has been demonstrated in previous studies. Changes in the nerve terminal morphology of the SOL were also greater than in previous studies and suggest that a functional adaptation or remodelling may occur following CORT treatment to maintain the neuromuscular interface during the enhanced catabolic effects of the steroid. These steroid-induced stress changes are similar in some respects to those observed in aging and disuse studies of the vertebrate neuromuscular junction. This suggests that glucocorticoid hormones may play an etiological role in the homeostasis of the neuromuscular junction in response to various stimuli.
Anat Rec 1990 May
PMID:Effects of chronic corticosterone treatment on the morphology of rat neuromuscular junctions. 236 23

Neovascularization of the anterior stroma of the rat cornea was associated with prolonged zinc deficiency (in this model). There was also an increase in the myelinated nerves of the cornea. Blood vessels were not observed in the corneas of the pair-fed and ad-libitum-fed control animals. The invading blood vessels were frequently associated with Schwann cells and neurites. Unmyelinated nerves were observed in the corneal stroma of all three experimental groups.
Anat Rec 1986 Sep
PMID:Vascularization of the rat cornea after prolonged zinc deficiency. 242 89

7S-NGF is a pro-protein containing a neurotrophic subunit, beta-NGF, which has been localized by immunocytochemistry to the granules of granular convoluted tubule (GCT) cells in certain murine salivary glands [Watson et al., Anat Rec (1985) 213:365]. The 7S-NGF pro-protein contains zinc and is stabilized by zinc ions [Pattison and Dunn, Biochemistry (1976) 15:3696]. In the present work, dithizone, toluene sulfonamide quinoline (TSQ), and neo-Timm's methods for zinc were used to determine whether zinc histochemistry could be used to visualize the zinc associated with the 7S-NGF complex and, if so, whether zinc histochemistry might corroborate the reported localization of the 7S-NGF complex in GCT secretory granules. The results indicate that intensity of zinc staining varies with the reported variations in NGF levels in different salivary glands, and that the zinc is selectively concentrated in the GCT secretory granules. We suggest that zinc histochemistry may be a useful marker for the presence of the zinc-stabilized 7S-NGF pro-protein.
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PMID:Zinc-containing 7S-NGF complex. Evidence from zinc histochemistry for localization in salivary secretory granules. 243 83

An acute phase reaction was elicited in four horses to which Freund's adjuvant was administered intramuscularly. The localised inflammation was accompanied by changes in the plasma concentrations of copper, iron and zinc. The plasma copper concentration, the plasma ceruloplasmin copper concentration and the ceruloplasmin oxidase activity in the plasma steadily increased to a maximum 24 days after the administration of the adjuvant. At this time, the plasma copper concentration was 2.2 micrograms/ml, a 90 per cent increase over the baseline concentration. The ratio of the concentration of plasma ceruloplasmin copper to plasma copper remained constant, indicating that the non-ceruloplasmin bound copper component of the plasma is also an acute phase reactant in the horse. The plasma zinc and iron concentrations decreased to 59 per cent and 30 per cent of their respective baseline concentrations and the severity of the inflammation appeared to influence the plasma concentrations of each metal. Weak correlations between the plasma fibrinogen concentration and the plasma copper and zinc concentrations of 25 horses with plasma fibrinogen concentrations of 5 g/litre or greater indicated that a single measurement of plasma copper concentration is not useful in the diagnosis of non-specific inflammatory disorders of the horse. However, the results suggest that the plasma copper concentrations in serial samples may be used to monitor the resolution of inflammatory disorders in the horse.
Vet Rec 1989 Mar 11
PMID:Acute phase response in horses: changes in plasma cation concentrations after localised tissue injury. 249 17

The effect of immobilization on endplate morphology of the rat soleus muscles was studied qualitatively and quantitatively. The endplate was visualized by light microscopic zinc iodide osmium (ZIO) staining and by electron microscopy. The soleus muscle was immobilized by pinning of ankle and knee joints at right angles for 5 days. Immobilized muscles were then compared to the contralateral side and to normal litter mates. After 5 days of partial disuse, muscle fibers atrophied and nerve terminal area increased in ZIO-determined measurements. Neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) of disuse muscle fibers visualized by electron microscopy exhibited greater amounts of degeneration than either contralateral or control NMJs. Degeneration consisted of nerve terminal disruption, exposed junctional folds, and postsynaptic areas which contained little or no postjunctional folds. Regeneration also occurred in the same NMJs, consisting of small terminals associated with large expansion of junctional folds, several small terminals occurring within the same primary synaptic cleft, and several axons wrapped by the same Schwann cell. These observations demonstrate, for the first time, that partial disuse for only 5 days produces muscle atrophy as well as denervation-like changes at the NMJ, which leads to terminal sprouting within the endplate area and remodeling.
Anat Rec 1989 May
PMID:Rapid neuromuscular remodeling following limb immobilization. 272 12


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