206 results match your criteria: "Institute for Animal Science and Health ID-DLO[Affiliation]"

Social stress in rats is known to induce long-lasting, adverse changes in behaviour and physiology, which seem to resemble certain human psychopathologies, such as depression and anxiety. The present experiment was designed to assess the influence of individual or group housing on the vulnerability of male Wildtype rats to long-term effects of inescapable social defeat. Group-housed rats were individually exposed to an aggressive, unfamiliar male conspecific, resulting in a social defeat.

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The two main heme proteins, hemoglobin and myoglobin, are important factors determining meat quality aspects such as color and hemorrhage. The extent of hemorrhage in muscle tissue can probably be determined by measuring the hemoglobin content. The objective of this study was twofold: 1) to develop a specific and reproducible method to quantify the hemoglobin and myoglobin content in muscle tissue of broiler chickens, and 2) to study the effect of hemorrhage on the hemoglobin content in muscle tissue.

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The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether there is a difference in coping style in chicks from a high (HFP)- and low-feather pecking (HFP) line of laying hens. Active and passive coping styles can be distinguished by differences in sympathetic and parasympathetic activities on the heart. We studied heart rate during baseline conditions and during manual restraint in HFP and LFP hens.

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Canine herpesvirus (CHV1) is found in dogs all over the world and may spread by oronasal or sexual contact. We developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of antibodies against CHV1 in dogs. The antigen used for this ELISA was prepared by purifying CHV1 virions from the medium of infected A72 cells.

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Eight-hundred-and-ninety-six cattle belonging to herds officially designated Brucella-free, and 190 cattle belonging to infected herds were tested with the skin delayed-type hypersensitivity (SDTH) test, using brucellin (273) prepared from a mucoid strain of Brucella abortus. An increase in skinfold thickness > or = 2 mm was considered a positive SDTH test. The serum agglutination test, complement fixation test and bacteriological examination were used to confirm SDTH test results.

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To detect Bovine Virus Diarrhoea Virus (BVDV)-specific antibodies in cattle serum, plasma and bulk milk, a simple, reliable and rapid blocking ELISA ("Ceditest") has been developed using two monoclonal antibodies ("WB112" and "WB103") directed to different highly conserved epitopes on the non-structural peptide NS3 of pestiviruses. The test can be performed at high reproducibility using undiluted samples. In testing 1000 field serum samples, the ELISA showed a specificity and a sensitivity relative to the virus neutralization test of 99% and 98%, respectively.

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The number of muscle fibers at birth appears to determine the maximal lean meat growth capacity in pigs and in cattle. Development of muscle fibers is regulated by the MyoD gene family consisting of MyoD1, myf-5, myf-6, and myogenin. Myf-5 is expressed in proliferating myoblasts.

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The porcine A-FABP gene (FABP4) was isolated and sequenced to study the role of A-FABP in the differentiation of intramuscular fat (IMF) accretion in pigs. The coding sequence of the porcine A-FABP gene is highly conserved across human, mouse, and rat. Moreover, all the functionally important amino acids are conserved.

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A time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (TR-FIA) for human salivary cortisol was adapted for the measurement of cortisol in unextracted bovine blood plasma and serum. It has been demonstrated that the binding of cortisol binding plasma proteins (CBPP) to the cortisol-biotin primary probe cannot be eliminated by means of cortisol releasing agents. Complete inactivation of CBPP was achieved by heating water diluted samples for 30 min at 80 degrees C.

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This study is performed to gain knowledge about the quantitative distribution of bovine virus diarrhoea virus (BVDV) in tissues and white blood cells (WBC) at different intervals after acute infection. Ten specific pathogen-free calves were intranasally inoculated with 10(5) 50% tissue culture infective dose of the non-cytopathic BVDV strain 4800. Twelve hours after inoculation tonsil biopsies were taken and WBC were collected daily for virus isolation and titration.

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Polymorphic DNA markers in the genome of parasitic nematodes.

J Helminthol

December 1998

Department of Molecular Recognition, Institute for Animal Science and Health (ID-DLO), PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands.

Polymorphic molecular markers are being identified to characterize the genomes of parasitic nematodes. The aim is to construct a map with markers evenly spread over the six chromosomes. With such a map, regions can be identified that are under selection pressure when attempts are being made to eradicate worms, be it by drugs, vaccines or genetic resistance in the sheep.

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Bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) strains are tentatively divided in subgroups A, AB and B, based on antigenic differences of the G protein. A Dutch BRSV strain (Waiboerhoeve: WBH), could not be assigned to one of the subgroups, because the strain did not react with any monoclonal antibody against the G protein. We describe here that the WBH strain has accumulated critical mutations in subgroup-specific domains of the G protein gene, which also occur but then independently in G protein genes of BRSV subgroup A or B strains.

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Two groups of Holstein dairy cows, which showed either high- (HC; n = 8) or low (LC; n = 10) plasma cortisol concentrations in response to a psychological stressor (novel-environment test) in their first lactation, were used 1 year later for studying the effects of psychological stress on various aspects of the host defence during endotoxin-induced mastitis. Social isolation was used as a stressor; endotoxin was used to activate the host defence. HC-cows appeared to be more stressed by the experimental procedure than LC-cows.

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A selection experiment was carried out to study genetic and physiological factors influencing meat quality in lines of Large White pigs selected for lean (L) or fast (F) growth. Second and fourth generation pigs were used to determine effects on fibre type composition, fibre diameters and capillary density in the Longissimus Lumborum (LL). Significant differences in histochemical properties were found in the LL between L- and F-pigs, but only in the 4th generation.

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Environmental concerns about animal manure.

J Anim Sci

October 1998

Department of Nutrition of Pigs and Poultry, Institute for Animal Science and Health (ID-DLO), Lelystad, The Netherlands.

The structure of swine production has changed dramatically in the last four decades. Raw materials for swine feeds are often grown in regions other than where swine production takes place. Swine manure is mostly spread in the neighborhood of the facilities, which may lead to soil accumulation of minerals such as P, Cu, and Zn.

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In this study we investigated a panel of 20 polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies specific for chicken cells and tissues for cross-reactivity with other avian species, i.e. turkey, duck and quail, using immunoperoxidase staining on cryostat sections.

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We investigated the time course of porcine cellular and humoral immune responses against pseudorabies virus (PRV) after pigs were inoculated with PRV gE(-) mutant strain M141 and challenged with wild-type virus NIA-3. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated from blood samples; half were used directly and half were restimulated with PRV in vitro before use in a cytolytic assay. We determined time course and extent of PRV-specific lymphoproliferative and cytolytic response.

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A study was conducted to determine the repeatability of a procedure used to prepare brucellin from a mucoid strain of Brucella abortus, and to determine the biological activity of those brucellins. The brucellins were standardized to contain 1 mg protein/ml, and their potency was estimated according to the European pharmacopoeia norm for tuberculin. Estimation of the potency was done in cattle that have been sensitized with living or killed brucellae.

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The effects of regular moving and handling during the finishing period on behavioral and physiological responses of pigs during preslaughter treatment and consequences for meat quality were studied. From the age of 10 wk onward, 144 pigs were housed in groups of four (two gilts and two castrates) and subjected to one of the following treatments. The Environment treatment allowed pigs to move freely for 8 min outside their home pen.

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The present study describes a method to determine the onset and development of brain damage in broiler chickens. Exsanguination disrupts the brain metabolism and causes the brain to become ischemic. Energy-requiring systems in the cell membrane fail, which results in an ionic shift over the membrane, accompanied by a water influx into the cell.

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This paper reports further results of a two year livestock mortality survey in Afghanistan, where a war of more than a decade had completely disrupted the veterinary field services. A questionnaire-based survey to measure the impact of a veterinary field programme indicated that average annual mortality in cattle, sheep, and goats was substantially lower in districts that received veterinary services (covered districts) than in districts without any veterinary services (control districts). The impact of the programme varies according to the season and the age group of the animals involved.

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In the present study, we investigated the site in the host where protective gut immunity to Fasciola hepatica is induced and expressed, following the infection route of the parasite. Expression of protection was studied in ex vivo gut segments with intact blood and lymph supply that were prepared at different locations along the entire length of the small and large intestine. Four weeks after oral infection, significant protection was detected in the duodenum, upper jejunum, midjejunum, and ileum.

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We describe an ex vivo rat infection model to study protective immunity against Fasciola hepatica at the gut level. An exact number of newly excysted juveniles (NEJs) was injected into a gut segment with an intact blood supply and which was still attached to a live anaesthetized rat. NEJs that penetrated the gut wall during the following 6 h were recovered from a beaker filled with medium and were counted under a microscope.

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