Literature DB >> 20556614

Extensive use of torpor in 13-lined ground squirrels in the fall prior to cold exposure.

Rae L Russell1, Philip H O'Neill, L Elaine Epperson, Sandra L Martin.   

Abstract

Mammalian hibernation is characterized by profound reductions in body temperature (T(b)) and metabolic, heart and respiratory rates. These reductions are characteristic of torpor, which is temporally confined to winter. Hibernators including ground squirrels are heterothermic in winter, cycling between multiday periods of torpor with low T(b) and brief periods of rewarming. In contrast, ground squirrels remain homeothermic during summer, like non-hibernating mammals. The transition between the homeothermic and heterothermic phases of the circannual rhythm of hibernation is often overlooked in hibernation studies. Here, we examined the use of torpor throughout the fall transition in laboratory-housed 13-lined ground squirrels by recording core body temperature with an implanted data logger. As is typical of laboratory-based hibernation studies, animals were kept in standard housing prior to being moved into a cold, dark room to simulate natural hibernation conditions. Significantly, the vast majority of both male and female ground squirrels expressed torpor in the fall while still housed conventionally and prior to cold exposure. The expression of torpor was not predicted by body weight or age, rather it appears to be preprogrammed in a time-dependent manner that is independent of, yet enhanced by, environmental cues. The timing and duration of these torpor bouts occurring prior to cold exposure were also remarkably sporadic. Thus, it is not possible to know with certainty which animals are torpor-naive before cold exposure in the absence of continuous measurement of body temperature. We conclude that fall animals encompass variable points in the transition between summer and winter phases of the circannual cycle of hibernation, thereby confounding studies in which they are used as non-hibernating controls. Conversely, these fall transition animals offer unique opportunities to define the molecular changes that accompany and enable hibernation.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20556614      PMCID: PMC3116921          DOI: 10.1007/s00360-010-0484-8

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


  24 in total

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3.  Quantitative analysis of liver metabolites in three stages of the circannual hibernation cycle in 13-lined ground squirrels by NMR.

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Review 8.  Advances in molecular biology of hibernation in mammals.

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5.  Multistate proteomics analysis reveals novel strategies used by a hibernator to precondition the heart and conserve ATP for winter heterothermy.

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Review 6.  Proteomics approaches shed new light on hibernation physiology.

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7.  Metabolic changes associated with the long winter fast dominate the liver proteome in 13-lined ground squirrels.

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9.  Evaluating seasonal changes of cone photoreceptor structure in the 13-lined ground squirrel.

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