| Literature DB >> 31942242 |
Samrat Mondol1,2, Rebecca K Booth1, Samuel K Wasser1.
Abstract
Non-invasive stress and nutritional hormone analysis in relation to ecological and other biological indices have tremendous potential to address environmental disturbance impacts on wildlife health. To this end, we examined the relation between glucocorticoid (GC) and thyroid (T3) hormone indices of disturbance and nutritional stress in response to ACTH and TSH challenges in captive tigers, as well as how reproductive hormones vary by sex and reproductive condition. Glucocorticoid, thyroid, progesterone and androgen assays conducted on high-performance liquid chromatography separated fractions of biologically relevant fecal extracts revealed high cross-reactivity of these assays for their respective biologically relevant fecal hormone metabolites. Both adrenal and thyroid hormone metabolites were elevated in response to ACTH and TSH challenges. However, the adrenal and thyroid hormone responses to ACTH challenge were concurrent, whereas the adrenal response to TSH challenge was delayed relative to thyroid hormone elevation in both males and females. The concurrently elevated T3 in response to ACTH may serve to raise metabolic rate to maximize use of GC-mobilized glucose, whereas the relatively delayed GC rise following TSH challenge may be a response to glucose depletion due to increased metabolic rate associated with elevated T3. Progesterone, testosterone and androstenedione hormone metabolites were significantly elevated during gestation compared to lactation in a female monitored from conception through early lactation. Results suggest that the glucocorticoid, thyroid and reproductive hormone assays we tested can accurately measure the stress, nutrition and reproductive response from tiger feces, providing useful non-invasive tools to assess physiological responses to environmental stressors and their reproductive consequences in the wild.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenal; conservation physiology; stress-nutrition interplay; thyroid and reproductive hormones assay validation; tigers
Year: 2020 PMID: 31942242 PMCID: PMC6955020 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coz091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Details of the hormone assays conducted in this study
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| Corticosterone | RIA | 1:200 | 1.09 (0.99) | 3 | 11 | Corticosterone 100%, desoxycorticosterone 0.34%, testosterone 0.25%, cortisol 0.05%, aldosterone 0.03%, progesterone 0.02%, androstenedione 0.01%, 5A-dihydrotestosterone 0.01% and <0.01% for all other tested steroids |
| Triiodothyronine (T3) | RIA | 1:30 | 1.12 (0.99) | 2 | 11 |
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| Thyroxine (T4) | RIA | 1:10 | 0.94 (0.99) | 1 | - |
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| Aldosterone | RIA | 1:75 | 1.10 (0.99) | 3 | - | Aldosterone 100%, progesterone 0.007%, Corticosterone 0.002%, 18-OH-Corticosterone 0.033%, 11-Deoxycorticosterone 0.006, Cortisone 0.0003%, 11-Deoxycortisol 0.0004%, Dexamethasone 0.00005%, DHEA 0.0005%, Spironolactone 0.06% |
| Progesterone | RIA | 1:60 | 0.99 (0.99) | 2 | 8 | Progesterone 100%, 17b-OH-progesterone 15%, pregnenolone 13%, 20a-hydroxyprogesterone and estrone 1% and <1% for all other tested steroids |
| EIA | 1:360 | 1.01 (0.99) | 3 | 4 | Progesterone 100%, 3a-hydroxy-progesterone 188%, 3b-hydroxy-progesterone 172%, 11a-hydroxy-progesterone 147%, 11b-hydroxy-progesterone 2.7%, 5a-dihydroprogesterone 7%, pregnenolone 5.9%, corticosterone <0.1%, androstenedione <0.1% | |
| Testosterone | RIA | 1:30 | 0.96 (0.99) | 3 | 10 | Testosterone 100%, dihydrotestosterone 69%, 3b-androstanediol 22%, 3a-androstanediol 14%, androst-4-ene-3 and 17-dione 1%, 17b-estradiol 0.3% and <0.01% for all other tested steroids |
| EIA | 1:150 | 1.07 (0.99) | 2 | 5 | Testosterone 100%, 5a-dihydrotestosterone 56.8%, androstenedione 0.27%, androsterone 0.04%, DHEA 0.04%, Cholesterol 0.03%, 17b-estradiol 0.02%, progesterone <0.02%, pregnenolone <0.02%, hydrocortisone <0.02%, cholic acid and derivatives <0.02% | |
| Androstenedione (A4) | RIA | 1.300 | 1.12 (0.99) | 2 | - | Androstenedione 100%, DHEA-S 4.4%, DHEA 3.5%, estrone 1.79%, testosterone 0.64%, Progesterone 0.07%, 17B-estradiol 0.02% and <0.01% for aldosterone, cholesterol, corticosterone, cortisol, dihydrotestosterone, desoxycorticosterone, 11-desoxycortisol, estriol, 17A-hydroxyprogesterone, pregnenolone, pregnenolone sulphate and 17A-hydroxypregnenolone |
Figure 1Result of tiger fecal corticosterone HPLC fraction assays for both sexes
Figure 4HPLC fraction analyses of tiger fecal androstenedione in both sexes. The top and bottom panels show the results for a pregnant female and male tigers, respectively
Figure 2HPLC fraction analyses of tiger fecal thyroid hormone (T3 and T4) in both sexes. The top and bottom panels show the results for male and female tigers, respectively
Figure 3HPLC fraction analyses of tiger fecal androgens (Testosterone and androstenedione) in both sexes. The top and bottom panels show the results for male and female tigers, respectively
Figure 5Results of fecal corticosterone, aldosterone, T3 and T4 assays following ACTH challenges on male and female captive tigers (n = 2 for each sex). In X-axis 0 represent the day of ACTH challenge
Figure 6Results of fecal T3, T4, corticosterone and aldosterone assays following TSH challenges on male and female captive tigers (n = 1 for each sex). In X-axis 0 represent the day of TSH challenge
Figure 7Results of progesterone assays for a pregnant female from conception through early lactation
Measures of various hormones during different reproductive periods
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| 490.04 ± 51.31 | 86.67 ± 5.7 | 1501 ± 189.95 | 36 241 ± 3782.13 |
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| 4838.49 ± 839.81 | 162.96 ± 34.86 | 2134 ± 317.17 | 143094.26 ± 30025.15 |
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| 1318.39 ± 462.12 | 81.06 ± 27.22 | 1353 ± 169.48 | 66818.74 ± 11895.25 |