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1.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from 71 Columbian ground squirrels (Spermophilus columbianus) collected in 12 locations in western Canada were assayed for restriction-site variation with 10 endonucleases. Five of these endonucleases revealed variant patterns, and the composite genotypes were used to develop a linear transformation series among the mtDNA genotypes. Two of the four clones had a wide distribution, while the remaining two clones were geographically restricted. The mtDNA of Columbian ground squirrels was also compared to two other species of Sciuridae: Richardson's ground squirrels (S. richardsonii) and Arctic ground squirrels (S. parryii). Calculation of divergences from fragment length and restriction-site data indicated that Arctic ground squirrels and Richardson's ground squirrels were more closely related to each other than either was to Columbian ground squirrels. The transformation series among clones within the Columbian ground squirrels was rooted using Richardson's and Arctic ground squirrels as out-groups. From these data, we conclude that the colonization by female founders of Columbian ground squirrel populations occurred after deglaciation along the eastern ranges of the Rocky Mountains, while colonies on the western ranges may have been present before extensive deglaciation occurred, having existed in refugia in northwestern Alberta.  相似文献   

2.
A “trigger” substance was again indicated to be present in sera of hibernating animals. Sera from the hibernating 13-lined ground squirrel, hibernating woodchuck, hibernating Arctic ground squirrel, and hibernating Arctic marmot were all capable of inducing the 13-lined ground squirrel to hibernate in the summer, a season when that species would normally be active. The hibernation trigger is thus not species specific. It is effective whether drawn from these two Arctic species of hibernators or drawn from these two species of hibernators from the midwestern states. The normothermic Arctic marmot appears to have an “anti-trigger” substance in its serum in the summer, which impedes fall hibernation in the transfused 13-lined ground squirrel. This is similar to the anti-trigger observed in the summer serum of active 13-lined ground squirrels and active woodchucks. With respect to hypothermia, it was induced in Artic marmots and in Arctic foxes at Point Barrow, Alaska, in summer. Though in such cases body temperatures fell significantly (as in hibernation), no trigger was recovered from their hypothermic sera that could be shown to be capable of inducing summer hibernation in the ground squirrel. Neither was anti-trigger found in the serum of hypothermic experimentals. These latter experiments thus suggest that the release of trigger into the blood during hibernation is dependent on a mechanism more complex than simply lowering body temperature.  相似文献   

3.
Even though the existence of the blood-borne "hibernation induction trigger" has been reported in the 13-lined ground squirrel, transfusion of plasma from hibernating rodents with other hibernating species as the recipients failed to induce the occurrence of summer hibernation. In order to verify whether the response to the "trigger" substance is species specific, the present study was carried out to compare the effect of plasma from hibernating Richardson's ground squirrels on the incidence of summer hibernation in both juvenile Richardson's and adult 13-lined ground squirrels. In two series of experiments, 13-lined ground squirrels entered hibernation quite readily independent of the treatment. The rate of occurrence of hibernation ranged from 78% after sham injection to 86% after warm saline, fresh summer active plasma, and fresh hibernating plasma, respectively. There were no differences in the number of hibernation bouts and the number of days in hibernation after each treatment. In contrast, none of the juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels entered hibernation after any of the treatments up to the end of the 8-week observation period. These results not only argue against the existence of blood-borne "trigger" substance, at least in the Richardson's ground squirrel, but also caution against the use of the 13-lined ground squirrel as a standard test animal for the bioassay of the "trigger" substance.  相似文献   

4.
TNF production has been studied in peritoneal macrophages and splenic T cells of Arctic Yakutian ground squirrel (Citellus Undulatus Pallas) in hibernating and awake animals in winter and in prehibernating autumn as well as in active euthermic spring-summer animals. A high level of TNF production in macrophages of ground squirrel is observed over the active period and during arousals in winter. There are no significant season variations in TNF production in splenic T lymphocytes of ground squirrels. This suggests the major role of activated macrophages in the arousals of hibernating animals. T lymphocyte proliferation in ground squirrels in the active period is higher than in winter, and the most significant seasonal variations are found in T cell mitogenic response, which increases in spring-summer period. Evidence is presented that functional activity of macrophages of squirrel in autumn has much in common with that in winter rather than in spring-summer period.  相似文献   

5.
Synaptosomes were isolated from Yakutian ground squirrel brain cortex of summer and winter hibernating animals in active and torpor states. Synaptosomal membrane cholesterol and phospholipids were determined. The seasonal changes of synaptosomal lipid composition were found. Synaptosomes isolated from hibernating Yakutian ground squirrel brain cortex maintained the cholesterol sphingomyelin, phosphatidylethanolamine, lysophosphatidylcholine, cardiolipin, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine contents 2.5, 1.8, 2.6, 1.8, 1.6, and 1.3 times less, respectively, and the content of phosphatidylcholine twice as much as the one in summer season. The synaptosomal membrane lipid composition of summer animals was shown to be markedly different from that as hibernating ground squirrels and non-hibernating rodents. It is believed that phenotypic changes of synaptosomal membrane lipid composition in summer Yakutian ground squirrel are the important preparation step for hibernation. The phosphatidylethanolamine content was increased in torpor state compared with winter-active state and the molar ratio of cholesterol/phospholipids in synaptosomal membrane of winter torpor ground squirrels was lower than that in active winter and summer animals. These events were supposed to lead to increase of the synaptosomal membrane fluidity during torpor. Synaptosomes isolated from torpor animals have larger sizes and contain a greater number of synaptic vesicles on the synaptosomal profile area. The synaptosomal membrane lipid composition and synaptosome morphology were involved in phenotypic adaptation of Yakutian ground squirrel to hibernation.  相似文献   

6.
The isoform composition of myosin light chains and the extent of their phosphorylation in skeletal and cardiac muscles of ground squirrel Citellus undulatus in different periods of hibernation were studied. Regulatory myosin light chains of skeletal muscles of hibernating ground squirrels were completely dephosphorylated, while 25% of these light chains in active animals were phosphorylated. During hibernation, a shift of isoform composition of essential and regulatory skeletal muscle myosin light chains toward slower isoforms was observed, which is evidenced by the data obtained on m. psoas and on the totality of all skeletal muscles. In the atrial myocardium of hibernating ground squirrels, ventricular myosin light chains 1 (up to 60%) were registered. In contrast, during arousal of ground squirrels, in ventricular myocardium the appearance of atrial myosin light chains 1 (up to 30%) was revealed. A possible role of posttranslation changes in myosin light chains and their isoform shifts in the hibernation scenario is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Ouabain-sensitive K influx into ground squirrel and guinea pig red cells was measured at 5 and 37 degrees C as a function of external K and internal Na. In both species the external K affinity increases on cooling, being three- and fivefold higher in guinea pig and ground squirrel, respectively, at 5 than at 37 degrees C. Internal Na affinity also increased on cooling, by about the same extent. The effect of internal Na on ouabain-sensitive K influx in guinea pig cells fits a cubic Michaelis-Menten-type equation, but in ground squirrel cells this was true only at high [Na]i. There was still significant ouabain-sensitive K influx at low [Na]i. Ouabain-binding experiments indicated around 800 sites/cell for guinea pig and Columbian ground squirrel erythrocytes, and 280 sites/cell for thirteen-lined ground squirrel cells. There was no significant difference in ouabain bound per cell at 37 and 5 degrees C. Calculated turnover numbers for Columbian and thirteen-lined ground squirrel and guinea pig red cell sodium pumps at 37 degrees C were about equal, being 77-100 and 100-129 s-1, respectively. At 5 degrees C red cells from ground squirrels performed significantly better, the turnover numbers being 1.0-2.3 s-1 compared with 0.42-0.47 s-1 for erythrocytes of guinea pig. The results do not accord with a hypothesis that cold-sensitive Na pumps are blocked in one predominant form.  相似文献   

8.
Winter sleep of the ground squirrel Spermophilus undulatus was accompanied by a 20% decrease in phospholipid content (µg phospholipid per 1 mg protein) in microsomal fractions of the liver as compared with summer-active squirrels. The phosphatidylcholine level (mol %) in hibernating squirrels was lower than in summer-active squirrels, and the content of sphingomyelin (mol %) during the torpor bout was higher than in winter- and summer-active squirrels. The cholesterol, fatty acid, monoglyceride, and diglyceride levels in the microsomal fraction of the liver were elevated during hibernation. Pronounced seasonal changes in the lipid/protein ratio implicate the lipids of the liver microsomal fraction in adaptation of the ground squirrel to hibernation.  相似文献   

9.
The interfacial surface tension of the lung is regulated by phospholipid-rich pulmonary surfactant films. Small changes in temperature affect surfactant structure and function in vitro. We compared the compositional, thermodynamic and functional properties of surfactant from hibernating and summer-active 13-lined ground squirrels (Ictidomys tridecemlineatus) with porcine surfactant to understand structure-function relationships in surfactant membranes and films. Hibernating squirrels had more surfactant large aggregates with more fluid monounsaturated molecular species than summer-active animals. The latter had more unsaturated species than porcine surfactant. Cold-adapted surfactant membranes displayed gel-to-fluid transitions at lower phase transition temperatures with reduced enthalpy. Both hibernating and summer-active squirrel surfactants exhibited lower enthalpy than porcine surfactant. LAURDAN fluorescence and DPH anisotropy revealed that surfactant bilayers from both groups of squirrels possessed similar ordered phase characteristics at low temperatures. While ground squirrel surfactants functioned well during dynamic cycling at 3, 25, and 37°C, porcine surfactant demonstrated poorer activity at 3°C but was superior at 37°C. Consequently the surfactant composition of ground squirrels confers a greater thermal flexibility relative to homeothermic mammals, while retaining tight lipid packing at low body temperatures. This may represent the most critical feature contributing to sustained stability of the respiratory interface at low lung volumes. Thus, while less effective than porcine surfactant at 37°C, summer-active surfactant functions adequately at both 37°C and 3°C allowing these animals to enter hibernation. Here further compositional alterations occur which improve function at low temperatures by maintaining adequate stability at low lung volumes and when temperature increases during arousal from hibernation.  相似文献   

10.
G F Zhegunov 《Tsitologiia》1988,30(2):157-162
A significant increase in protein synthesis correlating with ultrastructural dynamics of cardiomyocyte organelle convertions has been demonstrated in cardiomyocytes of ground squirrel during arousal from hibernation. In hibernating ground squirrels, the ultrastructure of protein-synthesizing organelles and of the cardiomyocyte nucleus points out to the readiness of cells to active synthesis of proteins. In the perinuclear area of cardiomyocytes abundant ribosomes, elements of endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complex, mitochondria and high-energy substrates--glycogen and lipid inclusions--are seen. The cardiomyocyte nuclei are large, with highly convoluted borders and abundant pores, their nucleolar structure is granular, the chromatin is mainly diffuse. The potency of cardiomyocyte protein-synthesizing system of hibernating ground squirrels is realized every time at periodical arousals during hibernation. The role of cyclic changes of protein synthesis rate in adaptation of cells of hibernating mammals to functioning at various temperatures is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Hibernating animals consistently survive prolonged periods of cold with body temperatures near the freezing point. Previous studies have suggested that regulation of calcium influx may be a fundamental cellular mechanism for cold tolerance in hibernating species. The present study was undertaken to compare (i) the calcium dependence of contractility and (ii) [3H]nitrendipine binding in homogenates of ileal longitudinal smooth muscle from the nonhibernating guinea pig (Cavia porcellus) and a hibernator, the ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii). The contractility studies indicate that both the activation threshold for calcium and the concentration-response curve were shifted to the right in ground squirrel when compared with guinea pig. The binding site density in ground squirrel muscle was about an order of magnitude less than in guinea pig (Bmax = 10 +/- 2 (n = 12) and 86 +/- 6 fmol/mg protein (n = 5), respectively). These results indicate that ground squirrel tissues are less sensitive to external calcium and clearly have fewer calcium channels than the smooth muscle of the non-hibernator. The results continue to support the hypothesis that cold tolerance in hibernating species involves calcium homeostatic control mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
The phospholipid composition of ground squirrel heart muscle changes during hibernation: more lysoglycerophosphatides are found in the hibernating state than in the active state. Phase transitions inferred from spin label motion occur in the usual manner typical of mammalian mitochondria for the mitochondria and mitochondrial lipids from active squirrels. However, a conspicuous absence of a spin label-detectable phase transition is observed in equivalent preparations from hibernating animals. The addition of lysolecithin to preparations from active squirrels removes the break and induces a straight line in the Arrhenius plot. The lack of a spin label-detectable phase transition in hibernating animals, therefore, is attributed to an increased content of lysoglycerophosphatides present in the phospholipids during hibernation.  相似文献   

13.
Skeletal muscle atrophy can occur as a consequence of immobilization and/or starvation in the majority of vertebrates studied. In contrast, hibernating mammals are protected against the loss of muscle mass despite long periods of inactivity and lack of food intake. Resident muscle-specific stem cells (satellite cells) are known to be activated by muscle injury and their activation contributes to the regeneration of muscle, but whether satellite cells play a role in hibernation is unknown. In the hibernating 13-lined ground squirrel we show that muscles ablated of satellite cells were still protected against atrophy, demonstrating that satellite cells are not involved in the maintenance of skeletal muscle during hibernation. Additionally, hibernating skeletal muscle showed extremely slow regeneration in response to injury, due to repression of satellite cell activation and myoblast differentiation caused by a fine-tuned interplay of p21, myostatin, MAPK, and Wnt signaling pathways. Interestingly, despite long periods of inflammation and lack of efficient regeneration, injured skeletal muscle from hibernating animals did not develop fibrosis and was capable of complete recovery when animals emerged naturally from hibernation. We propose that hibernating squirrels represent a new model system that permits evaluation of impaired skeletal muscle remodeling in the absence of formation of tissue fibrosis.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Mammalian hibernation requires an extensive reorganization of metabolism that typically includes a greater than 95% reduction in metabolic rate, selective inhibition of many ATP-consuming metabolic activities and a change in fuel use to a primary dependence on the oxidation of lipid reserves. We investigated whether the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) could play a regulatory role in this reorganization. AMPK activity and the phosphorylation state of multiple downstream targets were assessed in five organs of thirteen-lined ground squirrels (Spermophilus tridecemlineatus) comparing euthermic animals with squirrels in deep torpor. AMPK activity was increased 3-fold in white adipose tissue from hibernating ground squirrels compared with euthermic controls, but activation was not seen in liver, skeletal muscle, brown adipose tissue or brain. Immunoblotting with phospho-specific antibodies revealed an increase in phosphorylation of eukaryotic elongation factor-2 at the inactivating Thr56 site in white adipose tissue, liver and brain of hibernators, but not in other tissues. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase phosphorylation at the inactivating Ser79 site was markedly increased in brown adipose tissue from hibernators, but no change was seen in white adipose tissue. No change was seen in the level of phosphorylation of the Ser565 AMPK site of hormone-sensitive lipase in adipose tissues of hibernating animals. In conclusion, AMPK does not appear to participate in the metabolic re-organization and/or the metabolic rate depression that occurs during ground squirrel hibernation.  相似文献   

16.
We demonstrated that the level of phospholipids in the liver mitochondrial fraction is increased by 60% during the winter hibernation season in the Yakut ground squirrel S. undulatus; the phospholipid composition in sleeping animals is characterized by an increase in phosphatidylethanolamine compared with summer animals. A sharp increase in the level of cholesterol, as well as fatty acid, monoglycerides, and diglycerides was found in the mitochondrial fraction of hibernating ground squirrels in relation to summer ground squirrels. Functional changes during hibernation concern the level of phosphatidylserine (the growth in sleeping animals compared with active animals). Seasonal modification of the lipid composition of the liver mitochondria (particularly, an increase in the level of cholesterol) can play a role in the resistance of mitochondria to the seasonal increase in the level of fatty acids in the liver. Lipids of the liver mitochondrial fraction are involved in the ground squirrel adaptation to the hibernation season.  相似文献   

17.
The golden-mantled ground squirrel is a small rodent hibernator that demonstrates unusual myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform plasticity during several months of torpor, punctuated by bouts of rewarming and shivering thermogenesis. We measured MHC mRNA levels to determine whether pretranslational control mechanisms were responsible for differences in MHC2x protein expression, as we previously observed between active and hibernating ground squirrels. We first cloned cDNA using the 3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends (3' RACE) technique and identified three sequences corresponding to MHC1, MHC2x, and MHC2b. A DNA control fragment was developed to be used in conjunction with a coupled RT-PCR reaction to simultaneously measure MHC mRNA levels for each isoform in the skeletal muscle of ground squirrels. MHC mRNA and protein expression were strongly correlated, and type IIx and IIb mRNA levels were significantly different between active and hibernating ground squirrels. Pretranslational control of MHC protein is apparently an important process during hibernation, although the exact stimulus is not known. The techniques presented can be used to obtain MHC cDNA sequences and to measure mRNA expression in many vertebrate groups.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The localization of the somatostatin system in the brains of Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) and European hedgehogs (Erinaceus europaeus) was described by use of immunocytochemical methods. In addition, (i) chemically differing types of somatostatin and (ii) different activity phases of the somatostatin system during the hibernation cycle were investigated in the ground squirrel by means of high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and radioimmunoassay (RIA).In both species, the hypothalamic component of the somatostatin system (periventricular nuclei, fiber projections to the median eminence) is more prominent than the widespread extrahypothalamic representation of the system displaying mainly scattered perikarya and nerve fibers. The reactivity pattern of the somatostatin system varied among hibernating, aroused, and non-hibernating animals; moreover, the interspecific differences were pronounced. The activity of the hypothalamic somatostatin system in the hibernating ground squirrel appeared to be suppressed when compared to non-hibernating controls, whereas in the hibernating hedgehog this system showed signs of increased activity in comparison to non-hibernating controls. In contrast, in the present material the extrahypothalamic components of the somatostatin system did not exhibit significant changes in their activity.  相似文献   

19.
In two species of hibernators, hamsters and ground squirrels, erythrocytes were collected by heart puncture and the K content of the cells of hibernating individuals was compared with that of awake individuals. The K concentration of hamsters did not decline significantly during each bout of hibernation (maximum period of 5 days) but in long-term bouts in ground squirrels (i.e. more than 5 days) the K concentration of cells dropped significantly. When ground squirrels were allowed to rewarm the K content of cells rose toward normal values within a few hours. Erythrocytes of both hamsters and ground squirrels lose K more slowly than those of guinea pigs (nonhibernators) when stored in vitro for up to 10 days at 5°C. In ground squirrels the rate of loss of K during storage is the same as in vivo during hibernation, and stored cells taken from hibernating ground squirrels also lose K at the same rate. The rate of loss of K from guinea pig cells corresponded with that predicted from passive diffusion unopposed by transport. The actual rate of loss of K from ground squirrel cells was slower than such a predicted rate but corresponded with it when glucose was omitted from the storage medium or ouabain was added to it. Despite the slight loss of K that may occur in hibernation, therefore, the cells of hibernators are more cold adapted than those of a nonhibernating mammal, and this adaptation depends in part upon active transport.  相似文献   

20.
Summer hibernation induced in ground squirrels (Citellus tridecemlineatus) by urine or plasma from hibernating bats (Myotis lucifugus or Eptesicus fuscus). Summer hibernation in the thirteen-lined ground squirrel can be induced by intravenous injection of urine or blood plasma previously isolated from winter hibernating little brown bats (M. lucifugus) or big brown bats (E. fuscus). Urine- and plasma-injected ground squirrels kept at 8 °C hibernated earlier, longer, and deeper (as indicated by core temperature and respiratory rate measurements) than control ground squirrels injected with saline. This successful cross-order induction of hibernation demonstrates that the hibernation-inducing trigger (HIT) may be present in nonrodent mammals.  相似文献   

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