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Dive into the research topics where John F. Edwards is active.

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Featured researches published by John F. Edwards.


Theriogenology | 1999

Clinical and pathologic features of cloned transgenic calves and fetuses (13 case studies)

Jonathan R. Hill; Allen J. Roussel; Jose Cibelli; John F. Edwards; N.L. Hooper; M.W. Miller; James A. Thompson; C.R. Looney; Mark E. Westhusin; J.M. Robl; S.L. Stice

The neonatal abnormalities, treatments and outcomes in a group of 13 cloned transgenic calves and fetuses that progressed into the third trimester of pregnancy are described. From these 13 fetuses, 8 calves were born live, 4 stillborn fetuses were recovered from 3 cows that died 7 d to 2 mo before term, and 1 aborted fetus was recovered at 8 mo gestation. All fetuses and calves were derived from the same male fetal Holstein fibroblast cell line transfected with a beta-galactosidase marker gene. Six calves were delivered by Cesarian section and two by vaginal delivery between 278 and 288 d of gestation. Birth weights ranged from 44 to 58.6 kg. Five of the 8 live born calves were judged to be normal within 4 h of birth based on clinical signs and blood gas measurements. One of these 5 calves died at 6 wk of age from a suspected dilated cardiomyopathy. Three of the 8 calves were diagnosed with neonatal respiratory distress immediately following birth, one of which died (at 4 d of age) as a result of pulmonary surfactant deficiency coupled with pulmonary hypertension and elevated systemic venous pressures. Similar findings of chronic pulmonary hypertension were also observed in 2 of 5 fetuses. Placental edema was present in both calves that later died and in the 2 fetuses with cardiopulmonary abnormalities. Hydrallantois occurred with or without placental edema in 6 cows, and only 1 calf from this group survived. The 6 cows without hydrallantois or placental edema produced 5 live calves and 1 aborted fetus. The cardiopulmonary abnormalities observed in the calves and fetuses occurred in utero in conjunction with placental abnormalities, and it is likely that the cloning technique and/or in vitro embryo culture conditions contributed to these abnormalities, although the mechanism remains to be determined.


Veterinary Pathology | 1989

Ovine Arthrogryposis and Central Nervous System Malformations Associated with in utero Cache Valley Virus Infection: Spontaneous Disease

John F. Edwards; C. W. Livingston; Shan-Ing Chung; E. C. Collisson

Gross appearance and histologic lesions seen in 15 newborn lambs in an outbreak of congenital arthrogryposis with hydrocephalus or hydranencephaly (CAH) in Texas are described. Severe arthrogryposis with skeletal muscle hypoplasia was seen in limbs of affected lambs. Spinal column deformities were also present. Multiple central nervous system (CNS) malformations were present in CAH lambs including micrencephaly, cerebellar hypoplasia, micromelia, hydrocephalus, hydranencephaly, and porencephaly. Histologic lesions consisted primarily of areas of necrosis and loss of the paraventricular neuropil and motor neurons in the CNS and a resolving myositis with poorly developed myotubular myocytes in skeletal muscle. Seroepidemiologic studies on the flock and serologic data from heart blood taken from the stillborn affected lambs indicated that the outbreak was due to in utero infection with Cache Valley Virus.


Virus Research | 2003

Characterization of a North American orf virus isolated from a goat with persistent, proliferative dermatitis.

Jianhua Guo; Z. Zhang; John F. Edwards; R.W. Ermel; Charles A. Taylor; A. de la Concha-Bermejillo

The characterization of an orf virus (OV) isolated from skin lesions of a goat kid with severe, persistent, proliferative dermatitis, and designated orf virus-San Angelo 2000 (OV-SA00) strain, is described. The identity of OV-SA00 was confirmed by a combination of methods, including electron microscopy, amplification of specific fragments of viral DNA by polymerase chain reaction, restriction enzyme analysis of viral DNA and gene sequencing. Restriction endonuclease analyses of viral DNA and the protein profile studied by Western blot revealed differences between OV-SA00 strain and the profiles of other OV strains that have been published. The restriction enzyme profile of OV-SA00 was also different from the orf virus vaccine (OV-V) strain used to vaccinate this kid. Comparison of the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences indicated that OV-SA00 is closely related to OV-V strain, the Scottish OV strains orf11 and MRI Scab, and the human OV-CE/Shoe strain and more distant to bovine papular stomatitis virus (BPSV) reference strain and the pseudocowpox virus (PCPV)-MNV/Till strain. These results indicate that OV-SA00 is a strain of OV rather than a different parapoxvirus. Further studies are necessary to determine if the severity of orf-induced lesions in this goat kid was the result of individual host susceptibility factors.


Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2000

Theriogenology Question of the Month

Jared Voge; John F. Edwards; Charles C. Love; T.L. Blanchard

History A 10-year-old Quarter Horse stallion was examined in mid-May at our veterinary medical facility to determine the cause of brown-tinged discolored semen. The previous year, the stallion was located in Canada and reportedly ejaculated discolored semen during the breeding season; endoscopic examination of the urethra at that time failed to reveal abnormalities. Escherichia coli was isolated from a semen sample, and the isolate was susceptible in vitro to amikacin, gentamicin, and enrofloxacin. However, discoloration of the semen disappeared without treatment, and the stallion successfully completed that breeding season. The stallion was moved to Texas, and thick brownish-discolored semen was obtained during 2 semen collections prior to admission to our facility. Results of physical examination was unremarkable. A Missouri-model artificial vagina with a clear plastic bag attached for the semen receptacle was prepared and used for collection of a semen sample. An ovariectomized mount mare was used to facilitate semen collection, and successive fractions of semen were observed as they entered the bag during the ejaculatory process. Discolored semen appeared toward the end of the ejaculate, suggesting that the source was the accessory sex glands. A second ejaculate, which was similar in character to the first ejaculate, was collected by use of an open-ended artificial vagina that allowed separation of the fractions into sterile cups for microbial culture and cytologic analyses. Prior to washing of the penis, swab specimens were procured for bacteriologic culture from the preputial sheath, penis, fossa glandis and urethral diverticulum, and urethra. The penis and fossa glandis then were washed with a surgical scrub, rinsed with tap water, and dried before ejaculates were collected. Swab specimens also were obtained from the urethra prior to and immediately after ejaculation of the entire first ejaculate, from the raw semen of the entire first ejaculate, from the sperm-rich portion of the fractionated second ejaculate, and from the sperm-poor portion of the fractionated second ejaculate. Mixed nonpathogenic bacteria were cultured from the preputial sheath, penis, fossa glandis, and urethra prior to washing; however, we did not culture substantial bacterial growth from the urethra after washing but prior to ejaculation or from the sperm-rich portion of the fractionated second ejaculate. Heavy growth of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus was cultured from the entire first ejaculate, sperm-poor portion of the fractionated second ejaculate (ie, latter fractions of the ejaculate), and urethra immediately after ejaculation. In vitro susceptibility testing revealed the isolate was susceptible to enrofloxacin (minimum inhibitory concentration [MIC] < 0.25 µg/ml) and amikacin (MIC < 8 µg/ml) but resistant to gentamicin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.


Veterinary Parasitology | 2013

Toxoplasma gondii abortion storm in sheep on a Texas farm and isolation of mouse virulent atypical genotype T. gondii from an aborted lamb from a chronically infected ewe

John F. Edwards; J. P. Dubey

Sheep are commonly infected with the protozoan parasite, Toxoplasma gondii. Infection may cause early embryonic death and resorption, fetal death and mummification, abortion, stillbirth, and neonatal death. Most sheep acquire T. gondii infection after birth. Recent studies reported that congenital ovine transmission of T. gondii may be more common than previously believed, but these findings are solely based on PCR data and require confirmation using other techniques to verify the findings. In the present study, during the lambing season of 2005 a toxoplasmosis abortion storm occurred in a flock of purebred Suffolk ewes on a farm in Texas. Only 14 healthy lambs were born, and 38 abortuses, mummies and weak or stillborn lambs were delivered. Another 15 fetuses identified by ultrasound were presumably resorbed or were aborted undetected. Antibodies to T. gondii were found in 37 (94.8%) of the 39 ewes and 30 of them had high titers (1:3200 or higher) when tested in the modified agglutination test (MAT). In the 2006 lambing season, two (both with MAT titers of ≥ 3200 in 2005) of 26 ewes delivered T. gondii infected lambs. T. gondii tissue cysts were found histologically in lesions of encephalitis in a lamb from one ewe and viable T. gondii (designated TgShUs55) was isolated from the brain and heart of a lamb from the second ewe. TheTgShUs55 had an atypical genotype using 10 PCR-RFLP markers, and was 100% lethal for Swiss Webster mice, irrespective of the dose or the stage of the parasite inoculated. In subsequent seasons, the ewes lambed normally. The results of the present study support the hypothesis that most sheep that have aborted due to T. gondii develop protection against future toxoplasmosis induced abortion, but the protection is not absolute.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Leptin acts at the bovine adenohypophysis to enhance basal and gonadotropin-releasing hormone-mediated release of luteinizing hormone : differential effects are dependent upon nutritional history

M. Amstalden; D.A. Zieba; John F. Edwards; P.G. Harms; T. H. Welsh; R.L. Stanko; G.L. Williams

Abstract Recombinant ovine leptin (oleptin) stimulates an acute increase in the secretion of LH in fasted, but not in normal-fed, cows through an augmentation of the magnitude of individual pulses of LH. Herein, we tested the hypothesis that this effect could be accounted for by functional changes at the adenohypophyseal (AP) level. Eleven ovariectomized, estradiol-implanted cows were assigned to one of two dietary groups: normal-fed (n = 6) and fasted (fasted for 72 h; n = 5). After the animals were killed, the adenohypophyses were collected and AP explants were perifused with Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer (KRB) for a total of 6.5 h, including a 2-h treatment at 2.5 h with KRB or increasing doses of oleptin and a challenge at 4.5 h with 50 ng of GnRH. To test for effects of leptin at the hypothalamic level, explants encompassing the medial basal hypothalamus-infundibular complex (HYP) were incubated in KRB alone (control) or in KRB containing 1000 ng of oleptin. Basal release of LH from AP explants treated with leptin was greater (P < 0.02) than that from control-treated explants in fasted, but not in normal-fed, cows. To the contrary, leptin-treated explants from normal-fed, but not from fasted, cows released more (P < 0.001) LH in response to GnRH than control-treated tissues. Neither fasting nor leptin affected (P > 0.1) the secretion of GnRH from HYP explants. These observations support the hypothesis that leptin modulates the secretion of LH in mature cows, to a large extent, by its direct actions at the AP. Differential manifestations of these effects are dependent upon nutritional history.


Veterinary Microbiology | 1990

Evidence that cache valley virus induces congenital malformations in sheep

Shan-Ing Chung; Charles W. Livingston; John F. Edwards; Robert W. Crandell; Robert E. Shope; Maurice Shelton; Ellen W. Collisson

An outbreak of congenital abnormalities occurred in sheep at San Angelo, Texas, between December 1986 and February 1987. Of 360 lambs born, 19.2% had arthrogryposis or other musculo-skeletal problems and hydranencephaly (AGH), and the total neonatal loss was 25.6%. In 1987, all ewes that were tested with AGH lambs had antibody to Cache Valley virus (CVV), whereas 62% of the ewes with normal lambs had CVV-specific antibody. Pre-colostral serum samples from AGH lambs had neutralizing antibody to CVV. An increase in prevalence of CVV-specific antibody, from 5% during the spring of 1986 to 63.4% during the winter of 1987, occurred during a time that included the gestation of these affected lambs, as well as a period of increased rainfall. The isolation of a CVV-related strain from a sentinel sheep in October 1987 confirmed the continued presence of this virus in the pasture where this outbreak occurred and provided a recent field strain for future studies.


Veterinary Clinics of North America-food Animal Practice | 1994

Cache Valley Virus

John F. Edwards

Cache Valley Virus (CVV) is a causative agent of a mosquito-borne disease syndrome of sheep and, possibly, of all ruminants, characterized by embryonic and fetal death, stillbirths, and multiple congenital malformations. CVV is endemic in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Several related Bunyaviruses also may play a role in syndromes of congenital malformations and embryonic losses in North America.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Protective Role of Neutrophils in Mice Experimentally Infected with Rhodococcus equi

Ronald J. Martens; Noah D. Cohen; Samuel L. Jones; Thomas A. Moore; John F. Edwards

ABSTRACT Neutrophils are important in controlling early infections with the intracellular bacterium Rhodococcus equi. Antineutrophil monoclonal antibody (RB6-8C5)-induced neutrophil deficiency during the first week after experimental infection of mice with R. equi resulted in more severe disease and significantly increased tissue concentrations of R. equi.


Animal Reproduction Science | 2008

Pathologic conditions of the stallion reproductive tract

John F. Edwards

A review of the pathologic conditions of the stallion reproductive tract is presented. The stallion has a number of lesions similar to those of other male domestic species but also has several unique to the horse. Some are diagnosed infrequently now because of new disease control measures and new husbandry practices. Modern immunostaining and molecular techniques should be applied to better characterize pathologic conditions in the stallion.

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J. P. Dubey

United States Department of Agriculture

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Jennifer F. Thorson

Agricultural Research Service

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