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1.
Glutamate excitotoxicity, metabolic rate and inflammatory response have been associated to the deleterious effects of temperature during the acute phase of stroke. So far, the association of temperature with these mechanisms has been studied individually. However, the simultaneous study of the influence of temperature on these mechanisms is necessary to clarify their contributions to temperature-mediated ischemic damage. We used non-invasive Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy to simultaneously measure temperature, glutamate excitotoxicity and metabolic rate in the brain in animal models of ischemia. The immune response to ischemia was measured through molecular serum markers in peripheral blood. We submitted groups of animals to different experimental conditions (hypothermia at 33°C, normothermia at 37°C and hyperthermia at 39°C), and combined these conditions with pharmacological modulation of glutamate levels in the brain through systemic injections of glutamate and oxaloacetate. We show that pharmacological modulation of glutamate levels can neutralize the deleterious effects of hyperthermia and the beneficial effects of hypothermia, however the analysis of the inflammatory response and metabolic rate, demonstrated that their effects on ischemic damage are less critical than glutamate excitotoxity. We conclude that glutamate excitotoxicity is the key molecular mechanism which is influenced by body temperature during the acute phase of brain stroke.  相似文献   

2.
Herbivores of temperate and arctic zones are confronted during winter with harsh climatic conditions and nutritional shortness. It is still not fully understood how large ungulates cope with this twofold challenge. We found that red deer, similar to many other northern ungulates, show large seasonal fluctuations of metabolic rate, as indicated by heart rate, with a 60% reduction at the winter nadir compared with the summer peak. A previously unknown mechanism of energy conservation, i.e., nocturnal hypometabolism associated with peripheral cooling, contributed significantly to lower energy expenditure during winter. Predominantly during late winter night and early morning hours, subcutaneous temperature could decrease substantially. Importantly, during these episodes of peripheral cooling, heart rate was not maintained at a constant level, as to be expected from classical models of thermoregulation in the thermoneutral zone, but continuously decreased with subcutaneous temperature, both during locomotor activity and at rest. This indicates that the circadian minimum of basal metabolic rate and of the set-point of body temperature regulation varied and dropped to particularly low levels during late winter. Our results suggest, together with accumulating evidence from other species, that reducing endogenous heat production is not restricted to hibernators and daily heterotherms but is a common and well-regulated physiological response of endothermic organisms to energetically challenging situations. Whether the temperature of all tissues is affected, or the body shell only, may simply be a result of the duration and degree of hypometabolism and its interaction with body size-dependent heat loss.  相似文献   

3.
Physiological mechanisms causing reduction of metabolic rate during torpor in heterothermic endotherms are controversial. The original view that metabolic rate is reduced below the basal metabolic rate because the lowered body temperature reduces tissue metabolism has been challenged by a recent hypothesis which claims that metabolic rate during torpor is actively downregulated and is a function of the differential between body temperature and ambient temperature, rather than body temperature per se. In the present study, both the steady-state metabolic rate and body temperature of torpid stripe-faced dunnarts, Sminthopsis macroura (Dasyuridae: Marsupialia), showed two clearly different phases in response to change of air temperature. At air temperatures between 14 and 30°C, metabolic rate and body temperature decreased with air temperature, and metabolic rate showed an exponential relationship with body temperature (r 2=0.74). The Q 10 for metabolic rate was between 2 and 3 over the body temperature range of 16 to 32°C. The difference between body temperature and air temperature over this temperature range did not change significantly, and the metabolic rate was not related to the difference between body temperature and air temperature (P=0.35). However, the apparent conductance decreased with air temperature. At air temperatures below 14°C, metabolic rate increased linearly with the decrease of air temperature (r 2=0.58) and body temperature was maintained above 16°C, largely independent of air temperature. Over this air temperature range, metabolic rate was positively correlated with the difference between body temperature and air temperature (r 2=0.61). Nevertheless, the Q 10 for metabolic rate between normothermic and torpid thermoregulating animals at the same air temperature was also in the range of 2–3. These results suggest that over the air temperature range in which body temperature of S. macroura was not metabolically defended, metabolic rate during daily torpor was largely a function of body temperature. At air temperatures below 14°C, at which the torpid animals showed an increase of metabolic rate to regulate body temperature, the negative relationship between metabolic rate and air temperature was a function of the differential between body temperature and air temperature as during normothermia. However, even in thermoregulating animals, the reduction of metabolic rate from normothermia to torpor at a given air temperature can also be explained by temperature effects.Abbreviations BM body mass - BMR basal metabolic rate - C apparent conductance - MR metabolic rate - RMR resting metabolic rate - RQ respiratory quotient - T a air temperature - T b body temperature - T lc lower critical temperature - T tc critical air temperature during torpor - TMR metabolic rate during torpor - TNZ thermoneutral zone - T difference between body temperature and air temperature - VO2 rate of oxygen consumption  相似文献   

4.
The ontogeny of deep-body cold sensitivity was studied in 1 to 12 days old Pekin ducklings Anas platyrhynchos. Deep-body cold sensitivity was determined by means of thermodes implanted in the abdominal cavity. The thermodes were perfused with cold water for 15-min periods to lower the core temperature. Cooling of the body core elicited increases in metabolic rate and vasoconstrictions in the legs of all the ducklings. From the changes induced in metabolic rate and core temperature, deep-body cold sensitivity values of between −5.17 and −6.36 W · kg−1 · °C−1, were estimated. These values, which are in the range of those reported previously for adult Pekin ducks, did not change with age, and it is concluded that deep-body cold sensitivity is fully developed at hatching. Our next aim was to investigate whether the autonomic responses elicited by exposure of ducklings to cold ambient conditions could be explained by temperature changes within the body core. During cold exposure, the increase in metabolic rate was not accompanied by a concomitant decrease in core temperature. On the contrary, deep-body temperature increased slightly during the initial phase of cold exposure. The ducklings attained a metabolic rate amounting to 85–90% of their peak metabolic rate before the core temperature fell below the regulated level measured at thermoneutrality. Thus, despite the findings that Pekin ducklings have a highly-developed deep-body cold sensitivity, their metabolic cold defence under natural conditions seems to be mediated primarily by peripheral thermoreceptors. Accepted: 7 January 1997  相似文献   

5.
The thermoregulatory hypothesis proposes that endothermy in mammals and birds evolved as a thermoregulatory mechanism per se and that natural selection operated directly to increase body temperature and thermal stability through increments in resting metabolic rate. We experimentally tested this hypothesis by measuring the thermoregulatory consequences of increased metabolic rate in resting lizards (Varanus exanthematicus). A large metabolic increment was induced by feeding the animals and consequent changes in metabolic rate and body temperature were monitored. Although metabolic rate tripled at 32 degrees C and quadrupled at 35 degrees C, body temperature rose only about 0.5 degrees C. The rate of decline of body temperature in a colder environment did not decrease as metabolic rate increased. Thus, increasing the visceral metabolic rate of this ectothermic lizard established neither consequential endothermy nor homeothermy. These results are inconsistent with a thermoregulatory explanation for the evolution of endothermy.  相似文献   

6.
Experiments were done on eight young lambs to investigate the effects of hypoxemia on the body temperature, metabolic and cardiovascular responses to intravenous administration of a small dose of bacterial pyrogen (0.3 micrograms lipopolysaccharide extracted from Salmonella Abortus Equi; SAE). Each lamb was anaesthetized with halothane and prepared for sleep staging and measurements of cardiac output, arterial and mixed-venous haemoglobin oxygen saturations, body-core and ear-skin temperatures. Three experiments were done on each lamb, the first being done no sooner than three days after surgery. The first experiment consisted of establishing the thermal neutral environment during normoxemia (ie, environmental temperature at which total body oxygen consumption was minimal while body temperature was maintained) for each lamb. The second and third experiments were done at the lamb's thermoneutral environment as determined on day 1. One experiment was done during normoxemia (ie, control condition, SaO2 approximately 90%) and one experiment was done during hypoxemia (ie, experimental condition, SaO2 approximately 50%). Measurements were made during a control period and during one-minute experimental periods at 10 minute intervals for 120 minutes following administration of 0.3 micrograms of bacterial pyrogen in sterile saline. Administration of SAE produced a short-lived fever of about 0.8 degrees C in the normoxemic lambs, whereas no change in body-core temperature was observed in the hypoxemic lambs. During normoxemia, the increase in body-core temperature was preceded by peripheral vasoconstriction, the onset of shivering, and a surge in total body oxygen consumption. The increase in total body oxygen consumption was met primarily by an increase in total body oxygen extraction during the development of fever. Cardiac index, heart rate, and systemic oxygen transport increased during the peak body-core temperature response. Systemic arterial blood pressure did not change significantly during the febrile response; however, pulmonic arterial blood pressure increased. During hypoxemia, peripheral vasoconstriction and shivering occurred following administration of SAE, but there was no change in total body oxygen consumption or body-core temperature. Thus, our data provide evidence that hypoxemia alters the febrile response of young lambs to bacterial pyrogen. The precise mechanism remains to be determined.  相似文献   

7.
The response of body size to increasing temperature constitutes a universal response to climate change that could strongly affect terrestrial ectotherms, but the magnitude and direction of such responses remain unknown in most species. The metabolic cost of increased temperature could reduce body size but long growing seasons could also increase body size as was recently shown in an Arctic spider species. Here, we present the longest known time series on body size variation in two High-Arctic butterfly species: Boloria chariclea and Colias hecla. We measured wing length of nearly 4500 individuals collected annually between 1996 and 2013 from Zackenberg, Greenland and found that wing length significantly decreased at a similar rate in both species in response to warmer summers. Body size is strongly related to dispersal capacity and fecundity and our results suggest that these Arctic species could face severe challenges in response to ongoing rapid climate change.  相似文献   

8.
In keeping with studies of other desert rodents, the potentially diabetic spiny mouse has been demonstrated to have a very low basal metabolic rate, disproportionate to its body weight. The maintenance of a lower body temperature in response to high environmental temperatures and a lack of increase in metabolic rate in response to cooling have also been demonstrated. Assessments of "mechanical efficiency" have shown that spiny mice carry a potential selective advantage under fasting conditions. The findings, some of which are similar to those noted in other desert rodents, and in other species showing either spontaneous or induced hyperglycaemia, suggest that the low metabolic rate is at least partly based on ineffective glucose utilization. This phenomenon may be the common denominator of the survival advantage which has allowed both the successful evolution of species inhabiting warm, arid climes, and the persistence of the diabetic genotype in animal and human populations.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies report greater postexercise heat loss responses during active recovery relative to inactive recovery despite similar core temperatures between conditions. Differences have been ascribed to nonthermal factors influencing heat loss response control since elevations in metabolism during active recovery are assumed to be insufficient to change core temperature and modify heat loss responses. However, from a heat balance perspective, different rates of total heat loss with corresponding rates of metabolism are possible at any core temperature. Seven male volunteers cycled at 75% of Vo(2peak) in the Snellen whole body air calorimeter regulated at 25.0 degrees C, 30% relative humidity (RH), for 15 min followed by 30 min of active (AR) or inactive (IR) recovery. Relative to IR, a greater rate of metabolic heat production (M - W) during AR was paralleled by a greater rate of total heat loss (H(L)) and a greater local sweat rate, despite similar esophageal temperatures between conditions. At end-recovery, rate of body heat storage, that is, [(M - W) - H(L)] approached zero similarly in both conditions, with M - W and H(L) elevated during AR by 91 +/- 26 W and 93 +/- 25 W, respectively. Despite a higher M - W during AR, change in body heat content from calorimetry was similar between conditions due to a slower relative decrease in H(L) during AR, suggesting an influence of nonthermal factors. In conclusion, different levels of heat loss are possible at similar core temperatures during recovery modes of different metabolic rates. Evidence for nonthermal influences upon heat loss responses must therefore be sought after accounting for differences in heat production.  相似文献   

10.
In this field study, the energetic properties of tropical hibernation were investigated by measuring oxygen consumption and body temperature of the Malagasy primate Cheirogaleus medius in their natural hibernacula. These lemurs use tree holes with extremely varying insulation capacities as hibernacula. In poorly insulated tree holes, tree hole temperature and body temperature fluctuated strongly each day (between 12.8 and 34.4°C). The metabolic rate under these conditions also showed large daily fluctuations between about 29.0 ml O2/h and 97.9 ml O2/h in parallel with changes in body temperature. In well insulated tree holes in very large trees on the other hand, tree hole temperature and body temperature remained relatively constant at about 25°C. Lemurs hibernating in these tree holes showed a more constant metabolic rate at an intermediate level, but hibernation was interrupted by repeated arousals with peak metabolic rates up to 350 ml O2/h. The occurrence of these spontaneous arousals proved that the ability for thermoregulation persists during hibernation. Arousals were energetically costly, but much less so than in temperate and arctic hibernators. Despite the decisive influence of tree hole properties on the pattern of body temperature and metabolic rate during hibernation, the choice of the hibernaculum does not seem to be of energetic importance. The overall energetic savings by tropical hibernation amounted to about 70% as compared to the active season (31.5 vs. 114.3 kJ/d). Therefore, tropical hibernation in C. medius is an effective, well-regulated adaptive response to survive unfavourable seasons.  相似文献   

11.
Mammals and birds offer the most conspicuous example of homeothermic endothermy, a metabolic feature that implies maintenance of a constant body temperature along broad ranges of ambient temperature. The concept of homeothermic endothermy has been developed in close association with the terms thermoneutral zone and basal metabolic rate. These two metabolic parameters, however, are not easily estimated in micro-endotherms, a difficulty that might emerge from intrinsic aspects of endothermy in minute animals. To address this issue, we used empirical work derived from theoretical considerations. Our theoretical analysis is based on a model of body temperature control by shifts in metabolic rate, and assumes that micro-endotherms lose heat very quickly due to body size, and exhibit a remarkable capacity to rapidly increase metabolic output. We found that these two metabolic traits can lead to non-equilibrium metabolic rate and body temperature. We then measured metabolic rate and body temperature during euthermia in two species of hummingbirds, and analyzed data using the χ2 periodogram statistic and a power spectral analysis. We found long-range correlation in both oxygen consumption and body temperature during euthermia, a finding that suggests non-random 1/f oscillations. A similar pattern was not found in the rat, a much larger endotherm. Hummingbirds, then, do not appear to maintain steady-state metabolic conditions during euthermia. If, as we suggest, this pattern applies to micro-endotherms in general, the traditional concepts of thermoneutral zone and basal rate of metabolism might not apply to these animals.  相似文献   

12.
Knowledge of the effects of thermal conditions on animal movement and dispersal is necessary for a mechanistic understanding of the consequences of climate change and habitat fragmentation. In particular, the flight of ectothermic insects such as small butterflies is greatly influenced by ambient temperature. Here, variation in body temperature during flight is investigated in an ecological model species, the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia). Attention is paid on the effects of flight metabolism, genotypes at candidate loci, and environmental conditions. Measurements were made under a natural range of conditions using infrared thermal imaging. Heating of flight muscles by flight metabolism has been presumed to be negligible in small butterflies. However, the results demonstrate that Glanville fritillary males with high flight metabolic rate maintain elevated body temperature better during flight than males with a low rate of flight metabolism. This effect is likely to have a significant influence on the dispersal performance and fitness of butterflies and demonstrates the possible importance of intraspecific physiological variation on dispersal in other similar ectothermic insects. The results also suggest that individuals having an advantage in low ambient temperatures can be susceptible to overheating at high temperatures. Further, tolerance of high temperatures may be important for flight performance, as indicated by an association of heat‐shock protein (Hsp70) genotype with flight metabolic rate and body temperature at takeoff. The dynamics of body temperature at flight and factors affecting it also differed significantly between female and male butterflies, indicating that thermal dynamics are governed by different mechanisms in the two sexes. This study contributes to knowledge about factors affecting intraspecific variation in dispersal‐related thermal performance in butterflies and other insects. Such information is needed for predictive models of the evolution of dispersal in the face of habitat fragmentation and climate change.  相似文献   

13.
Metabolic depression and heat balance in starving Wistar rats   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Resting metabolic rate and heat balance was studied in rats starved for 8 days at ambient temperature 22 degrees C and 30 degrees C. A depression of the resting metabolic rate was observed, at both temperatures. Metabolic rate depression, expressed as a function of the ratio between the real body wt and the normal body wt, was less at 22 degrees C than at 30 degrees C. Deep body temperature decrements of 2 degrees C and 0.6 degrees C by the end of starvation indicated that central temperature controlling mechanisms were affected. Concurrent decrements of evaporative heat loss did not account for the changes in heat conductance, thus indicating that a reduction of peripheral blood circulation also took part.  相似文献   

14.
The cause of the cycle of urinary alcohol levels (UALs) in rats fed ethanol continually at a fixed rate is unknown. Rats were fed ethanol intragastrically at a constant dose for 2 mo, and daily body temperatures and UALs were recorded. Body temperature cycled inversely to UAL, suggesting that the rate of metabolism could be mechanistically involved in the rate of ethanol elimination during the cycle. To document this, whole body O(2) consumption rate was monitored daily during the cycle. The rate of O(2) consumption correlated positively with the change in body temperature and negatively with the change in UAL. Since the metabolic rate responds to changes in body temperature, thyroid hormone levels were measured during the UAL cycle. T(4) levels correlated positively with the O(2) consumption rate and negatively with the UALs. In a second experiment using propylthiouracil treatment, UALs did not cycle and a fall in body temperature failed to stimulate an increase in the rate of ethanol elimination. Consequently, rats died of overdose. Likewise, in a third experiment using rats with severed pituitary stalks, UALs failed to cycle and rats died of overdose. From these observations it was concluded that the UAL cycle depends on an intact hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis response to the ethanol-induced drop in body temperature by increasing the rate of ethanol elimination.  相似文献   

15.
Vertebrate ectotherms often encounter rapid, large scale changesin body temperature. In this paper, I discuss the direct effectsof changing body temperature on physiological parameters, aswell as corrective responses initiated by the animal. For manybiological functions, mean body temperature provides a usefulmeasure of the thermal effects produced by an altered environmentaltemperature. Under most conditions, the fins and body surfaceof fish are more important avenues of heat exchange than thegills. The local thermal sensitivity of peripheral blood vesselsresults in vasomotor adjustments which can alter thermal conductivity.Acid-base balance is challenged by changes in body temperature.Shifts in body temperature also alter metabolic demands, enzymeconformation, ionic and osmotic relationships, spontaneous activitylevels and nervous system function. Compensatory mechanismsinclude behavioral thermoregulation, by which animals seek toavoid stressful thermal environments, and autonomic restorativeresponses such as high temperature panting in reptiles. Waterbreathers may initiate anticipatory responses to minimize arterialoxygen fluctuations during termperature change. The organizationof the central neuronal network underlying the above regulatoryresponses is unclear. Both air and water breathers are ableto initiate compensatory acid-base responses, but the strategiesutilized by the two groups are quite different. Altered bodytemperature initiates long-term acclimation responses, and ifrapid, can also trigger stress responses.  相似文献   

16.
We compared non-shivering thermogenesis between two adjacent populations of the common spiny mouse Acomys cahirinus from different habitats, in relation to increasing salinity. Individuals were captured from the north- and south-facing slopes of the same valley, that represent "Mediterranean" and "desert" habitats, respectively. We hypothesized that the two populations of mice would differ in their thermoregulatory capacities, reflecting their need to cope with the environmental stress in each habitat. We measured resting metabolic rate by recording oxygen consumption, body temperature and response to an injection of exogenous noradrenaline. Mice were maintained on diets with increasing levels of salt intake to examine their abilities to cope with increasing osmotic stress. Mice from north-facing slopes generally had a higher resting metabolic rate and a higher increase in oxygen consumption in response to noradrenaline than mice from south-facing slopes. Increasing salinity decreased resting metabolic rate values, body temperature, and oxygen consumption in response to noradrenaline in both populations, and diminished slope-dependant differences. We suggest that these differences could be a result of an ongoing adaptive process to different climatic conditions, typical of the Mediterranean region, that are a demonstrable example of evolution in action.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Male and femalePsammodromus hispanicus from southern Europe were acclimated to four seasonal conditions of photoperiod and night time temperature. During the dark period, the lizards' body temperatures fell to ambient air temperature but during the light period the lizards were allowed to thermoregulate behaviourally and at such times the lizards' mean body temperature varied from 29.0°C to 32.6°C. The resting metabolic rate of these lizards was measured in 5°C steps from 5°C to 30°C or 35°C. Sexual condition had little effect on resting metabolic rate, but at low temperatures lizards acclimated to winter or spring seasonal conditions had lower resting metabolic rates than those acclimated to summer or autumn conditions. At temperatures above 20°C seasonal acclimation had no effect on resting metabolic rate. It is considered that the reduction in low temperature metabolic rate in spring and winter is induced by low night time temperatures and serves to conserve energy during those seasons when lizards must spend long periods at low temperature without being able to feed.  相似文献   

18.
Cold-adapted rats (unlike non-adapted animals) respond to an acute exposure to external cold by an overshoot increase in metabolic rate and a paradoxical increase in body core temperature. In contrast to external cooling, internal cooling with the aid of a chronically implanted intravenous heat exchanger elicited comparable increase in metabolic rate, coupled with a large fall in core temperature. It is concluded that cold adaptation alters peripheral thermosensitivity (enhances cold sensitivity), while the thermosensitivity of the core is not affected by the adaptation process.  相似文献   

19.
The physiological response to variation in air temperature (T(a)) can provide insights into how animals are adapted to different environments. I measured metabolic rate, total evaporative water loss (TEWL) and body temperature (T(b)) as a function of T(a) in stonechats from equatorial Kenya, temperate central Europe and continental Kazakhstan, environments where stonechats have evolved different life histories. All birds were raised and kept under identical captive conditions to highlight genetically based differences and to exclude phenotypic plasticity as explanatory factor. The slope relating metabolic rate to T(a) was steepest in Kazakh stonechats and lowest for birds from Kenya, indicating that, counterintuitively, the tropical stonechats were best insulated. Taking into account variation in T(b) in response to T(a), the lower critical temperature for the three populations fell between 32.0 and 34.9 degrees C, values higher than previously assumed. Whole organism BMR did not differ among populations, but because body mass was significantly higher in the Kenyan stonechats, their mass-specific BMR was lower compared with conspecifics from higher latitude. Whole organism or mass-specific TEWL did not differ among populations. Possibly, Kenyan birds are better insulated to compensate for their limited capacity to elevate metabolic rate.  相似文献   

20.
Temperature is one of the key environmental factors affecting the eco-physiological responses of living organisms and is considered one of the utmost crucial factors in shaping the fundamental niche of a species. The purpose of the present study is to delineate the physiological response and changes in energy allocation strategy of Bellamya bengalensis, a freshwater gastropod in the anticipated summer elevated temperature in the future by measuring the growth, body conditions (change in total weight, change in organ to flesh weight ratio), physiological energetics (ingestion rate, absorption rate, respiration rate, excretion rate and Scope for Growth) and thermal performance, Arrhenius breakpoint temperature (ABT), thermal critical maxima (CTmax), warming tolerance (WT) as well as thermal safety margin (TSM) through a mesocosm experiment. We exposed the animals to three different temperatures, 25 °C (average habitat temperature for this animal) and elevated temperatures 30 °C, 35 °C for 30 days and changes in energy budget were measured twice (on 15th and 30th day). Significant changes were observed in body conditions as well as physiological energetics. The total body weight as well as the organ/flesh weight ratio, ingestion followed by absorption rate decreased whereas, respiration and excretion rate increased with elevated temperature treatments resulting in a negative Scope for Growth in adverse conditions. Though no profound impact was found on ABT/CTmax, the peak of thermal curve was considerably declined for animals that were reared in higher temperature treatments. Our data reflects that thermal stress greatly impact the physiological functioning and growth patterns of B. bengalensis which might jeopardize the freshwater ecosystem functioning in future climate change scenario.  相似文献   

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