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Physiological and Biochemical Zoology : PBZ

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278589/osmoregulatory-performance-among-prickly-sculpin-cottus-asper-living-in-contrasting-osmotic-habitats
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuang Liu, Eric B Taylor, Jeffrey G Richards
AbstractDuring the colonization of freshwater by marine fish, adaptation to hypoosmotic conditions may impact their ability to osmoregulate in seawater. The prickly sculpin ( Cottus asper ) is a euryhaline fish with marine ancestors that postglacially colonized many freshwater habitats. Previous work on C. asper suggested that isolation in freshwater habitats has resulted in putative adaptations that improve ion regulation in freshwater populations compared with populations with current access to estuaries...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278588/clade-specific-allometries-in-avian-basal-metabolic-rate-demand-a-broader-theory-of-allometry
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha M Giancarli, Arthur E Dunham, Michael P O'Connor
AbstractMany attempts at providing a single-scale exponent and mechanism to explain metabolic rate assert a monolithic selective mechanism for allometries, characterized by a universal allometric scale power (usually chosen to be 0.75). To test for the deviations from universal allometric scaling, we gathered data from previously published metabolic measurements on 903 bird species and performed regressions of log(basal metabolic rate) and log(body mass) for (1) all birds and (2) 20 monophyletic clades within birds...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278587/cardiac-rhythms-and-variation-in-hibernating-arctic-ground-squirrels
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fiammetta Zanetti, Chao-Yin Chen, Hailey A Baker, M Hoshi Sugiura, Kelly L Drew, Zeinab Barati
AbstractThe dramatic decrease in heart rate (HR) during entrance into hibernation is not a mere response to the lowering of core body temperature ( T b ) but a highly regulated fall, as the decrease in HR precedes the drop in T b . This regulated fall in HR is thought to be mediated by increased cardiac parasympathetic activity. Conversely, the sympathetic nervous system is thought to drive the increase of HR during arousal. Despite this general understanding, we lack temporal information on cardiac parasympathetic regulation throughout a complete hibernation bout...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278586/building-bridges-from-genome-to-physiology-using-machine-learning-and-drosophila-experimental-evolution
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James N Kezos, Thomas T Barter, Mark A Phillips, Larry G Cabral, Zachary S Greenspan, Kenneth R Arnold, Grigor Azatian, José Buenrostro, Punjot S Bhangoo, Annie Khong, Gabriel T Reyes, Adil Rahman, Laura A Humphrey, Timothy J Bradley, Laurence D Mueller, Michael R Rose
Abstract Drosophila experimental evolution, with its well-defined selection protocols, has long supplied useful genetic material for the analysis of functional physiology. While there is a long tradition of interpreting the effects of large-effect mutants physiologically, identifying and interpreting gene-to-phenotype relationships has been challenging in the genomic era, with many labs not resolving how physiological traits are affected by multiple genes throughout the genome. Drosophila experimental evolution has demonstrated that multiple phenotypes change because of the evolution of many loci across the genome, creating the scientific challenge of sifting out differentiated but noncausal loci for individual characters...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278585/early-life-cooling-alters-later-corticosterone-response-to-restraint-in-prefledging-eastern-bluebirds-sialia-sialis-but-does-not-alter-adrenal-sensitivity-to-acth
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sharon E Lynn, Michael D Kern
AbstractEnvironmental challenges faced early in life can both activate and shape the development of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Activation of this axis is characterized in part by elevated levels of glucocorticoids, exposure to which can have profound effects throughout an animal's life. We have demonstrated that in nestling eastern bluebirds ( Sialia sialis ), bouts of environmentally relevant cooling result in elevations of corticosterone (the primary avian glucocorticoid) very early in life...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37278584/environmental-drivers-of-growth-and-oxidative-status-during-early-life-in-a-long-lived-antarctic-seabird-the-ad%C3%A3-lie-penguin
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Coline Marciau, David Costantini, Sophie Bestley, Olivia Hicks, Mark A Hindell, Akiko Kato, Thierry Raclot, Cécile Ribout, Yan Ropert-Coudert, Frederic Angelier
AbstractIn vertebrates, developmental conditions can have long-term effects on individual performance. It is increasingly recognized that oxidative stress could be one physiological mechanism connecting early-life experience to adult phenotype. Accordingly, markers of oxidative status could be useful for assessing the developmental constraints encountered by offspring. Although some studies have demonstrated that developmental constraints are associated with high levels of oxidative stress in offspring, it remains unclear how growth, parental behavior, and brood competition may altogether affect oxidative stress in long-lived species in the wild...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921272/thermal-stability-of-contractile-proteins-in-bat-wing-muscles-explains-differences-in-temperature-dependence-of-whole-muscle-shortening-velocity
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea D Rummel, Sharon M Swartz, Richard L Marsh
AbstractMuscle contractile properties are dependent on temperature: cooler temperatures generally slow contractile rates. Contraction and relaxation are driven by underlying biochemical systems, which are inherently sensitive to temperature. Carollia perspicillata , a small Neotropical bat, experiences large temperature differentials among body regions, resulting in a steep gradient in temperature along the wing. Although the bats maintain high core body temperatures during flight, the wing muscles may operate at more than 10°C below body temperature...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921271/widespread-torpor-use-in-hummingbirds-from-the-thermally-stable-lowland-tropics
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Henry S Pollock, Daniel Lamont, Sean E MacDonald, Austin R Spence, Jeffrey D Brawn, Zachary A Cheviron
AbstractTorpor, the temporary reduction of metabolic rate and body temperature, is a common energy-saving strategy in endotherms. Because of their small body size and energetically demanding life histories, hummingbirds have proven useful for understanding when and why endotherms use torpor. Previous studies of torpor in hummingbirds have been largely limited to tropical montane species or long-distance migrants that regularly experience challenging thermal conditions. Comparatively little is known, however, about the use of torpor in hummingbirds of the lowland tropics, where relatively high and stable year-round temperatures may at least partially negate the need for torpor...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921270/the-role-of-metabolic-phenotype-in-the-capacity-to-balance-competing-energetic-demands
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael J Lawrence, Hanna Scheuffele, Stephen B Beever, Peter E Holder, Colin J Garroway, Steven J Cooke, Timothy D Clark
AbstractGiven the critical role of metabolism in the life history of all organisms, there is particular interest in understanding the relationship between individual metabolic phenotypes and the capacity to partition energy into competing life history traits. Such relationships could be predictive of individual phenotypic performances throughout life. Here, we were specifically interested in whether an individual fish's metabolic phenotype can shape its propensity to feed following a significant stressor (2-min exhaustive exercise challenge)...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921269/a-standardized-protocol-for-measuring-bioelectrical-impedance-in-green-turtles-chelonia-mydas
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Kophamel, Leigh C Ward, Ellen Ariel, Diana Mendez, Lauren M O'Brien, Lauren Burchell, Suzanne L Munns
AbstractBioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is gaining popularity in wildlife studies as a portable technology for immediate and nondestructive predictions of body composition components, such as fat-free and fat masses. Successful application of BIA for field-based research requires the identification and control of potential sources of error, as well as the creation of and adherence to a standardized protocol for measurement. The aim of our study was to determine sources of error and to provide a standardization protocol to improve measurement precision of BIA on juvenile green turtles ( Chelonia mydas ; <mml:math xmlns:mml="https://www...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921268/temperature-effects-on-dna-damage-during-hibernation
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren de Wit, Maarten R Hamberg, Anne M Ross, Maaike Goris, Fia F Lie, Thomas Ruf, Sylvain Giroud, Robert H Henning, Roelof A Hut
AbstractDuring multiday torpor, deep-hibernating mammals maintain a hypometabolic state where heart rate and ventilation are reduced to 2%-4% of euthermic rates. It is hypothesized that this ischemia-like condition may cause DNA damage through reactive oxygen species production. The reason for intermittent rewarming (arousal) during hibernation might be to repair the accumulated DNA damage. Because increasing ambient temperatures ( T a 's) shortens torpor bout duration, we hypothesize that hibernating at higher T a 's will result in a faster accumulation of genomic DNA damage...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921267/could-chronic-hypothermia-in-a-human-affect-the-clock-system
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
André Malan, Gerhard Heldmaier
AbstractHibernation-like episodes would be particularly interesting for clinical and spatial use if they could be observed and induced in humans. As animal hibernation differs from hypothermia with its control by a temperature-dependent clock, we undertook to find evidence that human hypothermia might affect the circadian clock system. We revisited Siffre's 1962 abyss experiment. Deprived of temporal information and showing signs of chronic hypothermia, Siffre underestimated his stay underground by 22 d. We show that the temperature-dependent clock equation for classical hibernators accurately predicts Siffre's subjective times, and we list potential conditions to be further explored for inducing hibernation-like bouts in humans...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921266/back-to-the-womb-a-perinatal-perspective-on-mammalian-hibernation
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dominique Singer
AbstractThe idea of putting astronauts into a hibernation-like state during interplanetary spaceflights has sparked new interest in the evolutionary roots of hibernation and torpor. In this context, it should be noted that mammalian fetuses and neonates respond to the environmental challenges in the perinatal period with a number of physiological mechanisms that bear striking similarity to hibernation and torpor. These include three main points: first, prenatal deviation from the overall metabolic size relationship, which adapts the fetus to the low-oxygen conditions in the womb and corresponds to the metabolic reduction during hibernation and estivation; second, intranatal diving bradycardia in response to shortened O2 supply during birth, comparable to the decrease in heart rate preceding the drop in body temperature upon entry into torpor; and third, postnatal onset of nonshivering thermogenesis in the brown adipose tissue, along with the increase in basal metabolic rate up to the level expected from body size, such as during arousal from hibernation...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36921265/incomplete-caspase-3-activation-and-mitigation-of-apoptosis-in-hibernating-ground-squirrels-spermophilus-lateralis
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael D Treat, Anthony J Marlon, Frank van Breukelen
AbstractHibernating golden-mantled ground squirrels, Spermophilus [Callospermophilus] lateralis , tolerate proapoptotic conditions, such as low body temperature, anorexia, acidosis, and ischemia/reperfusion. Avoiding widespread apoptosis is critical for hibernator survival. Caspase 3, the key executioner of apoptosis, cleaves a majority of apoptotic targets. Under proapoptotic conditions, inactive procaspase 3 (32 kDa) is activated when cleaved into 17- and 12-kDa fragments (p32, p17, and p12, respectively)...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626845/the-physiological-costs-of-reproduction-in-a-capital-breeding-fish
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim Birnie-Gauvin, Carsten Berthelsen, Torben Larsen, Kim Aarestrup
AbstractReproduction represents the most energetically demanding period of life for many organisms. Capital breeders, such as anadromous sea trout ( Salmo trutta ), provide a particularly interesting group of organisms to study within the context of reproduction because they rely on energy stores accrued before breeding to reproduce and sustain all phenotypic and behavioral changes related to reproduction. Energy allocation into current reproduction therefore cannot be mitigated via food intake, resulting in an important life history trade-off...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626844/the-inverse-krogh-principle-all-organisms-are-worthy-of-study
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher J Clark, John R Hutchinson, Theodore Garland
AbstractKrogh's principle states, "For such a large number of problems there will be some animal of choice, or a few such animals, on which it can be most conveniently studied." The downside of picking a question first and then finding an ideal organism on which to study it is that it will inevitably leave many organisms neglected. Here, we promote the inverse Krogh principle: all organisms are worthy of study. The inverse Krogh principle and the Krogh principle are not opposites. Rather, the inverse Krogh principle emphasizes a different starting point for research: start with a biological unit, such as an organism, clade, or specific organism trait, then seek or create tractable research questions...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626843/sex-specific-effects-of-blood-serotonin-on-reproductive-effort-in-a-small-passerine
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vallo Tilgar
AbstractLaboratory animal models have shown that blood serotonin levels reflect consistent individual differences in behavioral decision-making and maternal behavior. Serotonin could also help to understand intraspecific variation in reproductive strategies, although the mechanisms are poorly understood. In this study, the relationships of plasma serotonin with breeding parameters and parental behavior were examined in wild great tits ( Parus major ). Females who laid eggs earlier had higher levels of serotonin in the second half of the nestling period, while no significant relationship of serotonin with clutch size, brood size, and body size was detected...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626842/mitigating-apoptotic-and-inflammatory-signaling-via-global-caspase-inhibition-in-hibernating-ground-squirrels-spermophilus-lateralis
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael D Treat, Anthony J Marlon, Lorena Samentar, Nora Caberoy, Frank van Breukelen
AbstractIn most systems, the caspase cascade is activated during cellular stress and results in inflammation and apoptosis. Hibernators experience stressors such as extremely low body temperatures, bradycardia, possible ischemia and reperfusion, and acidosis. However, widespread inflammation and apoptosis would represent an energetic expense that is incompatible with hibernation. To better understand global caspase regulation during hibernation, we employed a systems-level approach and analyzed 11 caspases in ground squirrel liver that are involved in inflammatory (caspases 1, 4, 5, 11, and 12) and apoptotic (caspases 2, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10) pathways...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626841/allometric-scaling-of-anaerobic-capacity-estimated-from-a-unique-field-based-data-set-of-fish-swimming
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grace A Casselberry, Joseph C Drake, Nicole Perlot, Steven J Cooke, Andy J Danylchuk, Robert J Lennox
AbstractLocomotion is a defining characteristic that can dictate many aspects of an organism's life history in the pursuit of maximizing fitness, including escaping predators, capturing prey, and transitioning between habitats. Exhaustive exercise can have negative consequences for both short-term and long-term energetics and life history trade-offs, influencing fish survival and reproduction. Studies of swimming performance and exhaustive exercise in fish are often conducted on individual species, but few multispecies analyses exist and even fewer in field settings...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36626840/leptin-as-an-antitorpor-hormone-an-explanation-for-the-increased-metabolic-efficiency-and-cold-sensitivity-of-ob-ob-mice
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan Nedergaard, Alexander W Fischer, Barbara Cannon
AbstractLeptin is recognized as an anorexigenic hormone. In its absence (e.g., in ob/ob mutant mice), mice become obese, primarily as a result of hyperphagia. A recurrent question is whether, additionally, leptin is thermogenic and thus also an antiobesity hormone in this way. We have earlier reviewed available data and have concluded that most articles implying a thermogenic effect of leptin have based this on a misconstrued division by body weight. Here, we have collected evidence that the remaining observations that imply that leptin is a thermogenic hormone are better understood as implying that leptin is an antitorpor hormone...
2023: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: PBZ
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