New Study To Begin On Equine Asthma And Macrophage Responses

A close up view of a horse
Published: February 23, 2023 11:40 am EST

What happens if the quarterback of the immune system goes rogue?

In a study set to begin in June 2023, Ontario Veterinary College researcher Dr. Janet Beeler-Marfisi will be looking at macrophage responses to the agents that cause asthma in horses.  

While studies on equine asthma have been ongoing for more than 40 years, researchers still don’t know why some horses are more prone to develop heaves when exposed to the same environmental factors as horses that do not get heaves. Much focus has been placed on researching lymphocytes (white blood cells that help the body fight viruses) but Dr. Beeler’s study will be looking at macrophage responses, because they are the cells that “call the shots.”

“When the horse breathes in some dust, it’s a macrophage that tells the horse’s immune system whether it's something they can safely ignore or something that they should respond to,” said Beeler. “To me, it makes sense to study the cells that call the shots, rather than those being told what to do [lymphocytes].”  

The culprits of asthma come in the forms that are plentiful around the barn: from the endotoxins found in manure to the dust found in the hay they eat.

“Even good quality hay will have some fungal spores or mold spores in it and that has a role to play in the development or heaves in horses that are susceptible to it,” said Beeler.

Beeler’s study aims to find out if macrophages, the quarterbacks of the horse’s immune system, are behaving like they should when these challenges to the horse’s respiratory system are encountered. Communications from the macrophage’s nucleus (the computer or brain of the cell) are sent through messenger RNA, which tells the rest of the cell (or factory) to make proteins (the product) – pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory proteins, for instance. This research seeks to reveal whether macrophages of heaves horses are the true culprit in the development of heaves. 

Dr. Beeler said 100,000 of 700,000 of horses in Canada are predicted to suffer from asthma and she followed with sage preventative advice:  

  • Purchase the best quality hay you can afford
  • Steaming or soaking hay reduces the dusts that cause asthma
  • Wet down the aisles before sweeping the barn and avoid sweeping dust into horse stalls
  • Keep barns well ventilated – especially when the tendency is to close everything up for warmth

Funding for this project has been provided by Equine Guelph. 

Equine Guelph supports a number of high-quality projects at the University of Guelph, by virtue of funding provided largely by the racing industry (Standardbred, Thoroughbred and Quarter horse organizations): the Horse Improvement Program from the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association, and the E.P. Taylor Foundation, started by veterinarians in the Thoroughbred industry, and now maintained in trust by the University and Equine Guelph.

For more preventative tips on equine asthma, check out Equine Guelph’s information sheet, Defend against Dust, and watch for the next online course offerings of Respiratory Health on TheHorsePortal.ca and the 12-week offering of Management of the Equine Environment.

(With files from Equine Guelph)

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