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Weber, B.; Paglia, D.; Harley, E.H., 2002. Red cell metabolism in the black rhinoceros: relevance to haemolytic disease: p. 181

In: Schwammer, H.M. et al. A research update on elephants and rhinos: proceedings of the International Elephant and Rhino Research Symposium, Vienna, June 7-11, 2001. Muenster, Schuling: pp. 1-352


  details
 
Location: Captive
Subject: Physiology
Species: Black Rhino


Original text on this topic:
Captive black rhinoceros populations in the USA have been afflicted with a severe haemolytic anaemia syndrome, together with a leukoencephalopathy and other disorders suggestive of a free radical pathologic basis, and this has been the subject of intensive metabolic investigation for some years in our laboratories. The black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis) shows a number of striking differences in its normal red cell biochemistry compared with humans: enzyme levels are often grossly different, ATP levels are l/50th that of humans, and they contain very high levels of free tyrosine in their red cells (but not in plasma). On exposure to oxidative stress some tyrosine is converted transitorily to dityrosine, a substance never previously described in free form in cells, with an inverse relationship to glutathione levels. Human red blood cells incubated under the same conditions show no sign of dityrosine production.
Tyrosine is known to be a substrate for oxidative reactions, and has been implicated in contributing to defence against oxidative damage in seminal plasma. Experiments will be described which suggest that that tyrosine, together with some purine metabolites, are acting as an additional defence mechanism against reactive oxygen intermediates in red cells with marginal protective mechanisms. Oxygen radical absorbance (ORAC) assays, together with red cell tyrosine and purine levels, are currently being compared between in situ rhinoceroses in South Africa and captive (ex situ) individuals in Europe and the USA,. The integration of these in vitro and in vivo analyses should reveal insights and mechanisms exploitable for the development of preventative or therapeutic measures against haemolytic and other free radical induced disorders in these populations.

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