Author:
Davies S. C.,Williams I. H.,White C. L.,Edwards J. E. Hocking
Abstract
Reductions in wool growth have previously been observed in ewes exposed to low
levels of corynetoxins, the causal agents of annual ryegrass toxicity. In this
experiment, tunicamycin, a commercially available and closely related toxin,
was infused into an isolated area of skin on the abdominal flank. Eleven sheep
were continuously infused for 5 days with saline on one side and a total dose
of either 35 or 350 µg tunicamycin/kg affected skin on the other
side. Both fibre length (P < 0·05) and fibre
diameter (P < 0·01) were reduced by
tunicamycin treatment. Cell division in the wool follicle bulb was also
reduced by tunicamycin (P < 0·005), indicating
that the toxin is able to have a direct effect on the follicles and their
ability to produce wool. The permeability of the vascular system increased in
the skin tissue treated with tunicamycin, but only at the highest toxin dose
(P < 0·05); therefore, poor nutrient supply to
the follicle may be a minor contributor to reduced wool growth. The direct
effect of tunicamycin on the wool follicle explains why wool growth is reduced
by low levels of corynetoxins independently of, and prior to, effects on the
whole animal.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
1 articles.
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