Literature DB >> 11409630

Correlations of plasma lipid metabolites with hibernation and lactation in wild black bears Ursus americanus.

P J LeBlanc1, M Obbard, B J Battersby, A K Felskie, L Brown, P A Wright, J S Ballantyne.   

Abstract

During the denning period, black bears (Ursus americanus) are capable of enduring several months without food. At the same time, female bears that are pregnant or lactating have an added metabolic stress. Based on laboratory studies, much of the energy required to support metabolism and lactation during denning in black bears comes from lipid reserves. These lipid reserves are mobilized and the most metabolically active lipid fraction in the blood are nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA). Therefore, we hypothesized that plasma NEFAs would be higher in denning relative to active bears and in lactating relative to non-lactating female bears. We further hypothesized that in bears with elevated plasma NEFA levels, other lipid-related parameters (e.g., ketone bodies, albumin, cholesterol, lipase) would also be elevated in the plasma. Denning bears had significantly increased NEFA levels in all classes (saturates, monoenes, and polyenes). A doubling of plasma NEFA levels and a 33% increase in albumin, the plasma fatty acid binding protein, in denning bears, resulted in NEFA/albumin ratios that were higher in denning bears (4:1) compared to those of active bears (3:1). Bears became relatively ketonemic with a 17-fold increase in D-beta-hydroxybutyrate levels during the denning period. Plasma cholesterol approximately doubled and lipase was ten-fold lower in denning relative to active bears. These findings indicate a strong correlation between plasma lipid metabolites and the denning period in a wild population of black bears.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11409630     DOI: 10.1007/s003600100180

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol B        ISSN: 0174-1578            Impact factor:   2.200


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