1.Cardiac enzymes related to high-altitude hypoxic adaptation in Tibetan chicken.
Hao ZHANG ; Chang-Xin WU ; Yangzom CHAMBA ; Yao LING ; Xiao-Hui TANG
Chinese Journal of Applied Physiology 2008;24(2):233-236
AIMThe purpose of this experiment was to investigate the cardiac physiological characteristics for adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia in chickens.
METHODSTibetan, Dwarf Recessive White and Shouguang chickens were fed at low-and high-altitude, and measurements were made in heart weights, lactic acid (LA), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) at the age of 10 weeks.
RESULTSThe results showed that Tibetan chickens at high-altitude had lower heart weight and LA content, and similar LDH activity, and higher SDH activity when compared to Dwarf Recessive White and Shouguang chickens.
CONCLUSIONIt was concluded that the cardiac mechanisms of high-altitude hypoxic adaptation in Tibetan chickens were increasing neither heart weight, nor level of anaerobic metabolism, but the higher SDH activity was significant to the adaptation. The SDH was a symbol enzyme for hypoxic adaptation in Tibetan chicken.
Adaptation, Physiological ; Altitude ; Animals ; Chickens ; physiology ; Heart ; physiology ; Hypoxia ; veterinary
2.CD147 and its interacting proteins in cellular functions.
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2007;59(4):517-523
CD147 (basigin, EMMPRIN, neurothelin, M6, HAb18G, etc.), a transmembrane glycoprotein, has a broad expression pattern on various epithelial cells with some differences between species, e.g. rat, mouse, chicken and human, but is highly enriched on the surface of cancer cells of epithelial origin such as lung cancer, breast cancer and hepatoma cells. The CD147 antigen consists of two IgSF domains, a transmembrane sequence containing a charged residue (Glu) and a cytoplasmic domain of 40 residues. The particular structural features suggest that it is involved in protein-protein interactions. Although the interacting molecules are still not well known due to unavailability of the 3D structure of CD147, adhesion, coimmunoprecipitation and other studies recently suggest that several proteins, including integrins, cyclophilins, MCT, etc., interact with CD147 as its ligand or receptor candidates to mediate a wide range of cellular functions.
Animals
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Basigin
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physiology
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Chickens
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Humans
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Mice
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Protein Conformation
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Rats
3.Study on comparative-physiology of some endocrinal activities on cold exposure and cold acclimation in rats and chicks.
Shi-Ze LI ; Yu-Ying YANG ; Huan-Min YANG
Chinese Journal of Applied Physiology 2008;24(1):23-103
Acclimatization
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physiology
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Animals
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Animals, Newborn
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Chickens
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Cold Temperature
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Endocrine Glands
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physiology
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Female
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Male
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Rats
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Rats, Wistar
5.Development and Application of the Reverse Genetic Technologies for Infectious Bursal Disease Virus.
Xiaole QI ; Yongqiang WANG ; Li GAO ; Honglei GAO ; Yulong GAO ; Xiaomei WANG
Chinese Journal of Virology 2015;31(3):326-331
Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) is an important member of the Birnaviridae family. IBUV mainly targets the bursa of Fabricius, the central immune organ of chicken, resulting in chicken infectious bursal disease (IBD). IBD represents one of the great challenges for ongoing development of the poultry industry. Reverse genetics for IBDV emerged over twenty years ago. Since then, the technologies behind virus rescue have continually improved leading to a deep understanding of IBDV gene function and tailored vaccine development. Our lab has also been instrumental in the field of IBDV research. Here we review studies on the pathogenic mechanism and the effective prevention and control of IBD.
Animals
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Birnaviridae Infections
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virology
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Chickens
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Infectious bursal disease virus
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genetics
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physiology
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Poultry Products
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virology
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Reverse Genetics
6.The effect of cold stress on DNA oxidative damage of lung in chicken.
Hai-yan JIA ; Jin-min LI ; Qian YU ; Jun-jie WANG ; Shu LI
Chinese Journal of Applied Physiology 2009;25(3):373-376
AIMTo explore the influence of cold strss on DNA oxidative damage of lung in chicken.
METHODSTook 15-day-old healthy chicks as the experimental object, carried on the cold stress (12 +/- 1 degrees C) to process. Detected the change of the MDA content, SOD and GSH-Px activity of the lung, and performed KCl-SDS precipitation method and fluorescence detection method to identify the influence of cold strss on DNA-protein crosslinks (DPC) and DNA-DNA crosslinks (DDC) of lung cell in different time.
RESULTSThe results were as follow: with the time lapsing during acute cold stress, MDA content gradually increased, the SOD and GSH-Px activity of the lung increased compared with their control group at each stress time point, and the lung cell DPC and DDC coefficient were all gradually increased with the time lapsing.
CONCLUSIONCold stress could bring about destruction in the lung tissue oxidation-antioxidant balance, and causes the oxidation damage of DNA.
Animals ; Animals, Newborn ; Chickens ; Cold Temperature ; DNA Damage ; Lung ; pathology ; Male ; Oxidative Stress ; physiology ; Stress, Physiological ; physiology
7.Longevity of Toxocara cati Larvae and Pathology in Tissues of Experimentally Infected Chickens.
Ahmad ORYAN ; Seyyed Mahmoud SADJJADI ; Shahrzad AZIZI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2010;48(1):79-80
This study was conducted to determine the distribution patterns and duration of stay of Toxocara cati larvae in organs of chickens and to investigate chronic phase and potential zoonotic risk of toxocariasis in chickens. Chickens were orally infected with 1,000 embryonated T. cati eggs and necropsied 240 days post-infection. Organs of the chickens were examined at gross and microscopic levels; tissues were digested to recover larvae. Peribronchiolitis with infiltration of lymphocytes, and hyperplasia of bronchiolar associated lymphatic tissues (BALT) and goblet cells, were evident in the lungs of infected chickens. There were mild hemorrhages and infiltration of lymphocytes and a few eosinophils in the meninges. Larvae were recovered from 30% of the exposed chickens. Larvae recovery indicated that T. cati larvae stay alive for at least 240 days in the chicken brain. Therefore, chickens may potentially act as a paratenic host in nature and transfer T. cati larvae to other hosts.
Animals
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Brain/pathology
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Chickens
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Larva/physiology
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*Longevity
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Lung/pathology
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Poultry Diseases/*parasitology/*pathology
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Toxascariasis/pathology/*veterinary
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Toxocara/*pathogenicity/*physiology
8.Sertoli cell proliferation during the post hatching period in domestic fowl.
H Hakan BOZKURT ; Abit AKTA ; M Baak ULKAY ; Umay B FIRAT
Journal of Veterinary Science 2007;8(3):219-222
There has been no study aimed at directly determiningof the periods of Sertoli cell proliferation in birds evendomestic fowl. The aims of this study were to observe thecessation of post-hatching mitotic proliferation of Sertolicells in domestic fowl, and to determine the volumedensity of Sertoli and germ cells during this period. Atotal of 50 Leghorn chicks were used in this study. Thetestes sections of the animals were immunostained withBrdU to observe the proliferation of cells from one to 10weeks of age. The volume density of the Sertoli and germcells were determined using the standard point countingmethod. The volume density of the germ cell nuclei wasinitially less than that of the Sertoli cells but the volumedensity converged by week 6, and remained relativelyconstant until the commencement of meiosis. Clearlabeling of Sertoli and germ cells was observed from week1 to week 7. The only those cells still labeled after 8 weekswere germ cells, indicating that Sertoli cell proliferationhad ceased. Therefore, it is recommended that anyresearch into the testes of domestic fowl should considerthe cessation of Sertoli cell proliferation by approximately8 weeks.
Animals
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Bromodeoxyuridine/metabolism
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Cell Differentiation/physiology
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Cell Growth Processes/physiology
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Chickens/*physiology
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Histocytochemistry/veterinary
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Male
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Mitosis/physiology
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Sertoli Cells/*cytology/metabolism
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Spermatocytes/cytology
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Testis/*cytology/metabolism
9.A Study on the Spinoreticulocerebellar Tract in Chickens.
Il Kwon PARK ; Moo Kang KIM ; Imagawa TOMORO ; Uehara MASATO
Journal of Veterinary Science 2003;4(1):1-8
The spicoreticulocerebellar (SRC) tract is an indirect spinocerebellar tract formed by the reticular formation (RF), which is connected to the cerebellum and spinal cord. The RF receives ascending fibers to both the spinal enlargement and sends descending fibers to the cerebellum. This study demonstrated that the connectivity of the neurons in the RF is concerned to the cerebellum and spinal cord using the anterograde projection with biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) and retrograde labeling with wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP). Until now, a preliminary study in mammals has dealt with the afferent and efferent pathways in separating groups of neurons in the RF. There are only few reports on chickens. This study examined the SRC tract in chickens. Following bilateral injections we injected BDA into chicken spinal cord (lumbosacral enlargement) and WGA-HRP into the cerebellum. Both of single- and double-labeled cells were found within the RF. The spinoreticular axons were mainly distributed from the potomedullary junction to the rostral medulla in the rostro-caudally RF levels, for example, nucleus of reticularis (n. r.) pontis oralis, locus coeruleus, n. r. pontis caudalis, n. r. pars gigantocellularis, n. r. gigantocellularis and n. r. parvocellualris. Reticulocerebellar labeling by the WGA- HRP was found in the same place as well as that of the BDA-projection. We observed that the proportion and location of double labeling cells in the chicken were almost similar in each level, comparing to the rodents. These results suggest that the reticular formation is strongly related to the spicoreticulocerebellar tract in chickens.
Afferent Pathways/physiology
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Animals
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Biotin/*analogs&derivatives
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Cerebellum/anatomy&histology/*physiology
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Chickens/*anatomy&histology/*physiology
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Dextrans
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Efferent Pathways/physiology
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Microinjections
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Reticular Formation/anatomy&histology/*physiology
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Spinal Cord/anatomy&histology/*physiology
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Wheat Germ Agglutinin-Horseradish Peroxidase Conjugate
10.Intracellular recordings and multi-parameter analysis of long-term potentiation of synaptic responses in chick brain slices..
Juan JIANG ; Nan SUI ; Meng-Ya WANG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2009;61(6):577-584
Day-old chick is unique animal model in brain development and behavior study. The intermediate medial mesopallium (IMM), a region of the chick forebrain, is intimately involved in the early learning processes, which offers the ideal opportunity to study the neural changes that underlie behavioral plasticity. In this paper, the intracellular recordings were conducted from IMM neurons in chick forebrain slices, in which electrophysiological properties, synaptic responses and long-term potentiation (LTP) were observed. Coronal sections of left forebrains (500 mum thick), containing IMM, were prepared from domestic chicks, aged 2-10 days. In 69 IMM neurons, the resting membrane potential was measured to be (-59.4+/-5.3) mV, slope membrane resistance (70.8+/-27.2) MΩ, and time constant (10.2+/-4.3) ms. The amplitude, threshold, overshoot, half-width, max rise slope and max decay slope of action potential evoked by intracellular current injection were (85.2+/-9.4) mV, (-38.7+/-7.6) mV, (25.6+/-8.9) mV, (2.1+/-0.5) ms, (150.5+/-41.2) mV/ms and (-64.3+/-14.0) mV/ms, respectively. Spike-firing frequency was increased with depolarizing current intensity in 32 of 69 tested cells [linear regression slope was (21.5+/-10.9) Hz/nA, P<0.05 in all cells]. The depolarizing synaptic responses (i.e. EPSPs), with stimulus intensity- and membrane potential-dependent properties, were elicited by dorsal (n=25) or ventral (n=62) focal electrical stimuli at 0.1 Hz in all tested IMM neurons and could be nullified reversibly by perfusion with 100 mumol/L AP5 (NMDA receptor antagonist) and 3 mumol/L DNQX (non-NMDA receptor antagonist), but enlarged by 6 mumol/L bicuculline (GABA(A) receptor antagonist). The EPSPs evoked by ventral stimulation were persistently increased after tetanic stimulation (5 Hz, 300 pulses/train, 2 trains, train interval 10 min) in 6 of 12 tested IMM neurons. The amplitude of EPSPs was potentiated to more than 120% of control level (when analyzed at 45 min of enhancement, P<0.05, n=5), which lasted at least 30 min and then could be referred to as LTP. Moreover, area under curve, duration and max rise slope of EPSPs were also enhanced (P<0.05), while no significant changes were observed in the electrophysiological parameters of IMM neurons following induction of LTP (P>0.05). These results suggest that the intracellular recording techniques in the chick brain slices can be used to perform multi-parameter analysis of synaptic responses and their LTP.
Animals
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Brain
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physiology
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Chickens
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In Vitro Techniques
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Long-Term Potentiation
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Membrane Potentials
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Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate
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antagonists & inhibitors