Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10961199 | Journal of Equine Veterinary Science | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy-based metabonomics is a powerful multivariate tool that can be used to characterize the unique metabolic profiles of living creatures. To test the hypothesis that NMR-based metabonomic analyses of serum would reveal metabolic differences between two types of horses, NMR spectra of serum samples drawn on 3 separate days from 2-year-old Mustangs (MU, n = 4) and 2 year-old Draft-cross (DC, n = 4) horses were compared. Metabonomic multivariate statistical analysis of the NMR spectra revealed clear and distinct clustering of each group. The metabolic separation between the Mustangs and Draft-crosses was due mainly to differences in urea, certain amino acids, acetate, lipoproteins, and glucose that probably reflected differences in growth rates and efficiency of protein utilization. NMR-based metabonomic analyses may be useful in detection and evaluation of metabolic differences between different types and physiologic states of horses.
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Authors
Lucia PhD, István PhD, Sarah L. VMD, PhD, DACVN,