Seasonal metabolic depression, substrate utilisation and changes in scaling patterns during the first year cycle of tegu lizards (Tupinambis merianae)
1 Departamento de Fisiologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade
de São Paulo, 05508-900 São Paulo, SP, Brazil
2 Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade
Estadual Paulista, Caixa Postal 199, 13506-900 Rio Claro, SP,
Brazil
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: scrsouza{at}ib.usp.br)
Accepted 16 October 2003
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Summary |
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Key words: dormancy, fasting, oxygen consumption, metabolic depression, scaling, lipid, glycogen, HOAD, CS, lizard, tegu, Tupinambis merianae
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Introduction |
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In addition to these classical model systems, many lower vertebrates are
known to enter a state of reduced metabolism over winter or under the combined
influence of air temperature and relative humidity
(Pinder et al., 1992;
Abe, 1995
;
Guppy and Withers, 1999
;
Storey, 2002
). The metabolic
correlates of seasonality in these animals probably share some fundamental
attributes with mammalian species that undergo a fasting period during the
annual cycle. For example, a substantial proportion of the energy supply
during the hypometabolic state may derive from lipid oxidation, and the
carbohydrate stores apparently constitute a limited potential for sustaining
energy expenditure at the whole body level, as opposed to the adjustments seen
under anoxic conditions (Storey,
1996
). Remarkably, unlike the situation in mammal and bird
species, a large reduction in aerobic metabolism can be achieved in the lower
vertebrates without the predominant effect on the energy requirements
associated with endothermy and a high thermoregulatory capacity. The
regulatory mechanisms involved in metabolic depression appear to be coupled to
an endogenous, circannual rhythm superimposed on the circadian pattern of
thermal behaviour and locomotor activity, as shown in terrestrial reptiles
(Hismiller and Heldmaier,
1988
; Foà et al.,
1994
). These aspects have been studied in detail in only a few
species, and considerable research remains to be done in order to identify the
general principles of regulation acting on these events.
Another largely unstudied aspect of seasonal fasting and hypometabolism
concerns how these profound changes develop in newly born animals of small
body mass and limited capacity to store substrates. Since much evidence
suggests that metabolic depression is endogenous in nature, it is important to
investigate how early this phenomenon manifests in the life cycle.
Furthermore, the ontogenetic adjustment of the relationship between energy use
and storage capacity as an essential part of the make up of seasonal dormancy
also may be predicted. We have begun to address these questions by examining
the occurrence of metabolic depression and associated changes in energy
metabolism during the first year cycle of tegu lizards (Tupinambis
merianae). The tegu is widely distributed throughout South America
(Avila-Pires, 1995) and occurs
in large numbers in southeastern Brazil. Winter at this latitude is
synchronized with the dry season, when insects and other food sources become
scarce. An innate rhythm is apparent soon after hatching and, in the adult
stage, the reproductive activities are concentrated in the spring months, with
foraging and energy intake becoming gradually reduced during summer until the
lizards enter a state of continuous inactivity, spending 4-5 months
underground at temperatures around 17°C in the autumn and winter months
(Abe, 1995
). Abe
(1995
) verified a marked
reduction in oxygen consumption during winter to 20-30% of the resting values
in lizards with a mean mass of 1270 kg, consumption rates becoming nearly
temperature insensitive over the range of 17-25°C. Anorexia is also a
marked feature of the annual cycle in tegu lizards and develops from late
summer through early autumn irrespective of the high temperatures and wide
food availability at this time of the year (H. R. Lopes and A. Abe,
unpublished observation).
The present study is concerned with the questions of how fasting and the magnitude of metabolic depression in young tegus compare with these events in their adult counterparts and whether such changes are influenced by body mass in the growing lizards. We also focus on the absence of reproduction at this early stage of development, emphasising correlative shifts in the levels of metabolites, substrate stores and enzymes over the first year cycle. The results support the notion of an endogenous rhythm acting via appetite control and energy metabolism in the tegu and suggest a shift in the balance between energy expenditure and body mass during the hypometabolic state, related to fat storage capacity and increased energy conservation in the smaller progeny.
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Materials and methods |
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A noticeable change in daily activity was seen in the early autumn, when the time spent on thermoregulation became progressively shorter and food intake gradually reduced until the lizards became continuously inactive inside the shelter. The animals were kept in the shade throughout the winter months, being routinely inspected and weighed every 15 days with minimal disturbance. By early spring, they expelled a dried pellet of uric acid and began moving outside the shelter, promptly reacting when mechanically stimulated. These changes were taken as an indication of arousal, and the animals were then returned to the previous photo- and thermal-period, with free access to drinking water. During the first days of arousal they were still anorexic, and a gradual increase in the time spent on thermoregulation and food intake took place over the following weeks.
Minimum and maximum air temperatures were recorded daily using a thermometer placed in the shelter area. The mean ranges for each seasonal period were: early autumn, 21-26°C; late autumn, 18-23°C; winter, 15-20°C; early spring, 20-26°C; late spring, 23-30°C.
Oxygen consumption measurements
Resting oxygen consumption rates
(O2) were
measured during the annual cycle on groups of tegus as follows: `autumn
activity', subdivided into early and late autumn to include lizards exhibiting
behaviour characteristic of the onset of dormancy; `winter dormancy',
including fasting and totally inactive lizards over 50-60 winter days;
`arousal' for lizards emerging from dormancy (90-100 days from the first
winter day), subdivided into rehydrated, unfed animals (48-96 h after arousal)
and fed animals (
1 week after arousal); `spring activity', including
fully active lizards 30-40 days after arousal.
The metabolic chamber consisted of a well-sealed acrylic box, having an
inlet and an outlet fixed to the top of the lid. The lizards were transferred
into individual metabolic chambers by mid-afternoon and kept in the shade for
at least two hours prior to experiments, during which time room air could
diffuse freely through an aperture. The chamber lids were then screwed shut,
providing an effective gas-tight seal, and
O2 was measured.
The initial and final fractional O2 concentrations were obtained by
taking two samples, each of 10 ml, with a gas-tight syringe, the first after
closing the chamber and the second after 60 min, in two consecutive series of
measurements. Prior to sampling, the air inside the chamber was gently mixed.
The sample was carefully injected into an oxygen analyzer (S-3; Applied
Eletrochemistry, Pittsburgh, PA, USA), drawn through silica gel and ascarite
and subsequently into the oxygen sensor via a pump at low speed.
Reproducibility of the procedure was verified by the repeated injection of
samples of gas mixtures containing known O2 concentrations: the
error was always less than 1%. Oxygen concentrations below 19% were avoided
during the experiments.
O2 was
calculated according to the equation developed by Hill
(1972
) and expressed as ml
O2 h-1 g-1 at standard temperature and
pressure.
Measurements were performed from 19.30 h to 23.30 h. Previous experiments
revealed two O2
peaks during the daily cycle of the tegu, one in the late morning and the
other in the early afternoon, followed by a progressive drop in
O2 to the
minimum values at 02.00-04.00 h. In one experimental series, resting rates
were measured in six different groups of animals at 25±1°C, except
during dormancy when 17±1°C was used. Both temperatures are
representative of the mean variation encountered by the tegu within its
underground shelter (Abe,
1995
). The lizards were then killed to obtain blood and tissue
samples for each specific seasonal period, as detailed below. In the other
experimental series, resting
O2 was measured
on the same group of animals at 25°C and 17°C throughout the year to
verify seasonal changes in the temperature effect, as calculated from the
Q10 ratio. In all cases, body temperature was assumed to be in
equilibrium with the air inside the chamber after the acclimation period.
Blood and tissue sampling
For blood and tissue analysis, one group of animals was killed in the
morning after O2
was measured, and named according to the seasonal period as above. In these
experiments, `autumn activity' refers to late autumn, and `arousal' to
rehydrated, unfed animals. The animals were decapitated and blood samples were
taken directly into preheparinised tubes (0.2 mg heparin per ml blood). A 0.1
ml sample was vigorously mixed with 0.2 ml of 0.6 mol l-1
perchloric acid (v/v), centrifuged at 6000 g and 4°C for
10 min, and stored at 10°C for lactate assay. The remaining volume was
centrifuged to obtain plasma samples, then frozen in liquid nitrogen and
stored at -80°C until analysis. The whole brain, liver, heart ventricle,
white portion of the iliofibularis muscle, and a sample of the longitudinal
tail muscle were quickly dissected and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen
and stored at -80°C for metabolite and enzyme assays. Finally, the two
abdominal fat bodies were removed and weighed, and a sample of the whole tail
was removed from the proximal third to assess cyclic changes in fat content.
All tissue samples were stored at -80°C until analysis.
Analysis of blood and tissue metabolites
Blood osmolality was measured in 10 µl plasma samples using a vapour
pressure Osmometer (5500; Wescor, Logan, UT, USA). Total protein was assayed
in blood samples according to Lowry et al.
(1951), using bovine serum
albumin as a standard. Total lipids and ß-hydroxybutyrate were measured
in plasma samples using diagnostic kits purchased from LabTest (Belo
Horizonte, MG, Brazil) and Sigma (St Louis, MO, USA), respectively. The first
method is based on the sulpho-phosphovaniline colorimetric reaction, and the
second follows the enzymatic oxidation of ß-hydroxybutyrate to
acetoacetate. D-glucose and L-lactate concentrations
were assayed in deproteinised samples according to standard enzymatic
procedures (Bergmeyer, 1984
);
NAD+ and NADP+ reactions were monitored at 340 nm using
a spectrophotometer (DU-70; Beckman, Fullerton, CA, USA) at 25°C. Values
are expressed as mmol l-1.
Total tissue water and protein were measured in duplicate samples of
skeletal (tail) muscle. Water content was estimated by the accompanying mass
loss in each tissue sample at 80°C until constant mass. For total protein
analysis, tissue samples were homogenised in four volumes (v/w) of 0.6 mol
l-1 PCA. The homogenate was centrifuged for 5 min at 10 000g and the pellet redissolved in 0.6 mmol l-1 PCA, the
procedure being repeated twice. The precipitate was solubilised in 2.5% KOH
and protein content was measured (Lowry et
al., 1951).
Glycogen content was assayed in liver, skeletal (tail) muscle, heart and
brain. Frozen samples were homogenized in ice-cold 0.6 mol l-1 PCA,
and two aliquot samples were taken. One was incubated with amyloglucosidase at
40°C for glycogen hydrolysis and D-glucose analysis, and the
other was used to estimate background glucose. The assays were conducted
following standard enzymatic procedures
(Bergmeyer, 1984), and glycogen
standards were used to control hydrolysis efficacy.
Total lipid content in liver, skeletal (tail) muscle and whole tail samples
was measured in freshly thawed samples as described by Folk et al.
(1957). Fresh masses of the
abdominal fat bodies were taken as an estimate of the amount of fat in this
deposit at different times during the annual cycle.
Enzyme assays
The activities of citrate synthase (CS), an indicator of tissue total
aerobic capacity, and of ß-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase (HOAD), an
indicator of the capacity for fatty acid utilisation, were measured in
skeletal muscle (iliofibularis, white portion), heart ventricle, liver and
brain tissue. Freshly thawed samples were homogenised at approximately 4°C
in nine volumes of buffer (w/v) with a teflon-glass homogenizer, using the
following composition: 20 mmol l-1 imidazol-HCl, pH 7.4, 2 mmol
l-1 EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100. Homogenates assigned to the CS assay
were consecutively frozen at -80°C and thawed at 4°C three times for
complete membrane disruption before centrifugation. All homogenates were
centrifuged at 17 000 g and 4°C for 10 min, and the
supernatant fractions kept ice-cold until assay.
Enzyme activities were measured spectrophotometrically (Beckman DU-70) at
25°C, by following the nicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide (NADH) and
5,5'-dithiobis 2-nitrobenzoic acid (DTNB) reactions at 340 nm and 412
nm, respectively, under saturating, non-inhibitory substrate conditions.
Buffers and enzyme assays followed the standard approaches given in Bergmeyer
(1984), and preliminary
experiments were performed to check for control reaction rates (reactions
omitting substrate) and to establish the optimal substrate and cofactor
concentrations for the final procedure. Each tissue sample was assayed in
duplicate, and enzyme activities were described as units per mg of tissue wet
mass. Soluble protein concentration was measured in all tissue fractions using
bovine serum albumin standards (Lowry et
al., 1951
), and enzyme activities were calculated per soluble
protein mass to verify any biased tendency due to a change in tissue water
content and/or to unspecific effects on the soluble protein content. Assay
conditions were as follows. CS: 50 mmol l-1 Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.3
mmol l-1 acetyl CoA, 0.1 mmol l-1 DTNB, 0.5 mmol
l-1 oxaloacetate; HOAD: 50 mmol l-1 Tris-HCl (pH 7.0),
0.15 mmol l-1 NADH, 0.1 mmol l-1 acetoacetyl CoA.
Statistical analysis
A one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) or the Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA on ranks
procedure was used to test for differences between groups over the annual
activity cycle. Means were then compared by the Student-Newman-Keuls or Dunn's
tests for multiple comparisons, where appropriate. The correlations between
O2, fat body
mass or Q10 values and body mass were assessed using a
least-squares linear regression method on log-transformed data, and the
contribution of body mass in predicting the dependent variable was evaluated
by the F-test. The analyses were based on Zar
(1999
) and performed using
SigmaStat statistical software (Jandel Co.). The probability of error in the
test results was generally assumed to be significant at
P
0.05.
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Results |
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Body mass did not differ significantly among the experimental groups above
(P=0.333). The scaling effect on seasonal fluctuations in
O2 and on the
degree of metabolic depression was then analysed in lizards whose body mass
ranged from 37 g to 257 g. The relationship between body mass
(Mb) and
O2 changed with
season during the first year cycle of the tegu
(Table 1). In early autumn,
O2 correlates
with Mb0.75, small animals having higher
mass-specific metabolic rates than their larger counterparts. Mass exponents
for the reduced metabolic rates were >1.0 during late autumn and winter
dormancy and close to 1.0 during unfed arousal, implying the lack of increase
in mass-specific metabolism with decreasing mass during the hypometabolic
state. According to the equations, a 3-fold increase in body mass leads to a
4-fold increase in
O2 in late
autumn and a 3.4-fold increase during winter dormancy. In both cases, the
slopes are significantly different from that obtained for early autumn
individuals (P<0.001), and the degree of metabolic depression in
late autumn would be 30% versus 61% for lizards weighing 180 g and 60
g, respectively; later in winter, metabolic depression would reach 73% and 83%
for the same body mass values. Thus, size-related differences may influence
either the magnitude of
O2 decrease
and/or the time of entry into dormancy. At the onset of arousal, the
O2 is somewhat
enhanced in aphagic animals although the percentage of depression is still
high, irrespective of body mass. The slope at this step is b=0.94 and
is significantly different from that for winter dormancy (P<0.01).
When feeding reinitiates, the exponent shifts remarkably to b=1.72
and, assuming a 3-fold increase in body mass,
O2 would
increase almost 7-fold. The calculated percentage of
O2 depression
would still be 53% in the smaller individuals as opposed to <10% in larger
lizards, indicating that the larger the individual, apparently less time is
necessary to accomplish the transition from dormancy to full activity. Later
in spring, the slope for resting
O2 is
b=0.96 and within one month of arousal metabolic rates are similar,
irrespective of body mass. Body mass accounted for more than 50% of
O2 variability
in most groups, with inter-individual variation being predominant in unfed,
arousing animals. After correcting
O2 for body
mass, the slope of the relationship between
O2 and body mass
was significantly different from 0 only in fed individuals during arousal
(b=0.722; P=0.035). In the other groups, variability was
large, perhaps preventing a statistically significant correlation.
The O2 rates
measured at 25°C and 17°C in the single group used for Q10
analysis showed a pattern similar to the above. Entry into dormancy occurred
earlier that year and, although typical early autumn data were not available,
aerobic metabolism at 25°C stabilised at values 77% lower during dormancy
compared with rest in spring. A significant decrease was seen at 17°C, the
magnitude being less along this lower temperature line (55%). There was no
statistical difference between
O2 values at
these two temperatures during late autumn or winter dormancy, and the
calculated Q10 is
1.5 for these two groups
(Table 2). During early
arousal, there was a significant difference between the
O2 values
measured at 25°C and 17°C, causing an increase in Q10
values prior to food intake, which then further increased to almost 3.0 after
feeding was reinitiated, increasing above this value in active spring
individuals. Statistical analysis failed to show any significant correlation
between body size and the Q10 effect in most groups in this
experimental series, possibly due to the reduced sample size (N=6).
An exception, however, was the spring activity group, in which a strong
correlation was found (r2=0.90; P<0.004). The
extremely high mass exponent (b=9.35) suggests a much greater
temperature sensitivity of
O2 between
17°C and 25°C in larger individuals at this period of the first annual
cycle.
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Changes in body mass and composition
The tegus weighed 15 g upon hatching and, in the laboratory, their
mass increased by 5-7-fold during the 4-5 months up to mid-autumn. Thereafter,
feeding and other activities became gradually reduced, and mass loss during
dormancy reached 15% of the maximum mass in late autumn, as calculated on an
individual basis for six animals (Table
2). More than half of this loss (62%) was quickly offset after
water intake during the first days of arousal, suggesting that mass change is
partially due to evaporative water loss, besides the use of other body stores.
Body mass increased at progressively higher rates after feeding was
reinitiated and increased more than 10-fold in the young lizards by the end of
the first year cycle.
During dormancy, plasma protein concentration increased concomitantly with a peak in osmolality, which also increased slightly in the late autumn and arousal groups compared with active spring animals (Table 3). There was a significant drop in the water content of skeletal (tail) muscle during dormancy, suggesting some loss of fluid from tissue compartments. Other changes during dormancy included a pronounced drop in circulating glucose to 40% and an increase in the levels of total protein (24%), lipids (43%) and ß-hydroxybutyrate (113%) in relation to spring activity values (Table 3). Particularly interesting is the almost completely restored glucose levels in arousing animals before food intake. Blood lactate did not change significantly, an indication that there is no substantial alteration in the rates of anaerobic glycolysis associated with metabolic depression in the tegu.
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At the tissue level, there was no significant change in the soluble protein content of tissues examined. Total protein in tail muscle, however, was 14% less by mid-winter and the cumulative loss was almost 50% in the tail muscle of arousing animals compared with the values found in late autumn (Table 4). The uric acid pellet expelled on arousal is another strong indication of protein mobilisation during the prolonged fast, possibly intensified by the onset of arousal. Tail muscle glycogen content was reduced to half by mid-winter and increased almost 3-fold in unfed aroused individuals, suggesting the use of amino acids resulting from protein catabolism as the carbon source for carbohydrate synthesis before feeding is reinitiated. Liver glycogen is higher in late autumn, reaching 474 µmoles (77 mg) of glycosyl units in a 100 g lizard, and reduces by 63% in mid-winter, while glucose levels remain constant (Table 4). The liver also regained its potential to accumulate glycogen in arousing animals, concomitant with a significant drop in its glucose content. A distinct trend was seen in the brain tissue, where glycogen is consistently higher in late fall, winter dormancy and arousal groups compared with spring activity, reaching a difference of almost 5-fold in the hypometabolic state. Similarly, heart glycogen is increased by 2-fold during winter dormancy compared with levels in late fall and spring activity, suggesting that these tissues may have the ability to preserve an endogenous source of glucose during the prolonged fasting. Together, these results support the idea that carbohydrate metabolism may be enhanced before food intake at the end of the prolonged fasting.
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Before entry into dormancy, the young lizards deposited an average of 2.7% of their body mass as fat in the abdominal fat bodies. The size of this deposit gradually decreased during dormancy, by 24% after 50-60 days of winter and by 62% on arousal in early spring; the fat deposits were virtually depleted in active spring animals 30-40 days after arousal. The liver lipid content was fairly constant at 35 mg g-1 throughout the year, corresponding to 53-70 mg in a 100 g lizard during the different seasons. In skeletal (tail) muscle, lipids averaged 24 mg g-1 muscle in late autumn animals, showing a slight tendency to drop in dormant and arousing animals. The fat content of the whole tail sample was 2-4-fold higher (79.2 mg g-1 tail) than in the skeletal muscle alone. This fat was reduced 25% by mid-winter and 45% in unfed arousing animals, compared with active spring individuals, suggesting that fat from a subcutaneous deposit may constitute another important energy source in fasting animals.
The correlation between body mass and abdominal fat body size was examined to test for a scaling effect on the deposition and mobilization pattern of this energy store. In late autumn animals, the fat body mass correlates with body mass with b=1.44 (P<0.000; Fig. 1), implying that a 3-fold increase in body mass leads to a 5-fold increase in fat deposits. This correlation was also significant after transforming fat content into an index of body mass (b=0.44; P=0.020), confirming that, on entry into dormancy, larger animals possess substantially more fat per unit mass available in this deposit. Halfway through dormancy, the relationship becomes less disproportionate, although larger animals still have a fat surplus of 18% in the fat bodies, as calculated for the body size range considered. The amount of fat mobilised during dormancy up to mid-winter would be approximately 16% for a small animal versus 35% for a large animal, and, therefore, small lizards apparently utilize fat from this deposit at lower rates than do larger ones. At the onset of arousal, however, the slope is remarkably high (b=3.53) and the correlation is statistically significant despite a smaller sample size in this group (P=0.014, N=6). This shift in scaling pattern implies ample differences in fat body size according to body mass in early arousal, and the correlation predicts that this deposit is virtually exhausted in the smallest individuals. The variability was very high in this group and the correlation was not significant after values were corrected for body mass (P>0.2). In late spring, fat bodies are largely reduced although still vary with body mass according to b>1, suggesting that the size-related differences observed in late autumn would continue in the active, growing animal.
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Enzyme activities
Maximum CS and HOAD activities in the tissues of young tegus are given in
Table 5. CS activity was higher
in the heart and brain, both highly oxidative tissues, and typically lower in
skeletal (iliofibularis) muscle. The maximum activity was constant in brain,
liver and skeletal muscle sampled during the different seasons, with a
tendency to decrease in the heart during dormancy (P=0.059). HOAD
activity was strongly affected by season in most tissues except the brain,
where it was nearly constant in all groups. In heart and skeletal muscle, HOAD
activity was reduced during winter dormancy and arousal compared with late
autumn and spring values. In the liver, the changes were remarkable, with
decreased activity in late autumn and almost 3-fold higher rates in dormant
and arousing lizards, reaching nearly 5-fold in active spring animals. The
pattern of change of enzyme activities calculated per tissue wet mass and per
mass of soluble tissue protein was very similar, indicating that the influence
of seasonal fluctuations in tissue water content and/or unspecific effects on
the soluble protein content are negligible.
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Discussion |
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The mechanisms that trigger dormancy are still poorly understood
(Guppy et al., 1994;
Storey, 2002
). In young tegus,
they result in a stepwise depression of aerobic metabolism in the whole
animal, initially causing resting
O2 to drop by
50% from early to late autumn at 25°C, associated with anorexia and a
clear departure from the normal routine. This intermediate condition extends
for a few weeks until the animals remain in their artificial refuges in the
mornings, spending 3-4 months inactive during the first annual cycle. During
this time, metabolic rates are stable at
20% of the resting value without
detectable variation within the daily cycle (S. C. R. de Souza and J. E. de
Carvalho, unpublished observations). The reverse change on arousal is also
gradual, with a partial increase in aerobic metabolism (22-25%) occurring in
aphagic animals measured 48 h after water intake, increasing further after
food intake recommences a few days later.
In mammals and birds, the interpretation of changes in
O2 with torpor
is complex mainly because of their inherent capability to generate heat and
thermoregulate in normothermic conditions. The underlying mechanisms may be
switched off and an ensuing large Q10 effect provides the animal
with an alternative route for substantial reduction in energy expenditure that
may be supplemented by lesser savings derived from metabolic depression
(Guppy and Withers, 1999
). In
the tegu, the situation is clearly different, with the hypometabolic condition
relying heavily on a temperature-independent mechanism for energy conservation
on a long-term basis. During late autumn and winter dormancy,
O2 decreases
markedly in newly hatched lizards compared with resting
O2 in early
autumn, the rates becoming nearly constant over the temperature range of
17-25°C. Accordingly, the calculated Q10 is low,
1.5
during the hypometabolic condition, in marked contrast to the large
Q10 effect (3.5) during spring activity, suggesting that the
temperature sensitivity of the metabolic reactions is somehow reduced during
dormancy. Thus, a torpid tegu in its refuge at 17°C would acquire total
metabolic savings equivalent to a much larger drop in body temperature, to
approximately 8°C. The percent depression in winter compared with resting
conditions in spring decreases when calculated along the lower temperature
line, reaching 55% at 17°C, in contrast to 77% at 25°C. Overall, the
reduced rates of oxidative metabolism during winter dormancy apparently meet
the limit for long-term survival at a very low energy cost.
The young tegus undergo a period of intense growth from hatching in early
summer until autumn, body mass increasing by 5-7-fold under laboratory
conditions. Thereafter, they become anorexic and their weight losses result in
a progressively negative balance during winter dormancy, leading to a net
weight loss of 15% until arousal in spring. Although the size range among
siblings is narrow, analysis of the individual data revealed an allometric
effect on the magnitude of metabolic depression during the first year cycle,
with a clear trend towards higher energy conservation in the smaller lizards.
Initially, the exponent relating
O2 and body mass
shifts from b=0.75 in early autumn individuals to b>1.0
during the hypometabolic condition, an indication that the extent of
depression is largely unproportional. The absolute rates of metabolism
increase by 35%, with a 3-fold increment in body size in the early stages of
depression, a difference of 18% remaining during winter dormancy when
metabolic costs are reduced to their lowest and small differences become
meaningful in terms of substrate savings for the duration of the hypometabolic
condition. During early arousal,
O2 rates are
somewhat enhanced in the aphagic individuals, and at this step the energy
expenditure per mass unity would be similar irrespective of body mass
(b=0.94). However, a few days after feeding is reinitiated, the
exponent rises remarkably to b=1.72, suggesting that the larger the
individual the less time is necessary to accomplish the full transition from
dormancy to activity. In late spring, the slope for resting
O2 returns to
b=0.96, and this close proportion between body mass and energy
expenditure may be associated with the intense growth period that follows
arousal in young lizards.
Interspecific comparisons of
O2 data from
adult, heterothermic birds and mammals suggest a body mass influence on the
extent of metabolic depression in smaller species, which undergo deep
hibernation (body temperature <10°C), the negative slope for the
mass-specific rates not being observed during torpor
(Geiser, 1988
). This shift in
the scaling pattern has been ascribed to the limited capacity of smaller
species to store energy as fat. A similar effect is not seen when the
different categories of heterotherms are analysed as a single group, the mass
exponents being indistinguishable and <1.0
(Guppy and Withers, 1999
). By
contrast, the
O2
changes in young tegus are the product of a complex interaction with a
seasonal rhythm superimposed on the developmental process. Within the
ontogenetic context of mammals and other vertebrates, the allometric exponent
for whole animal metabolism varies with the stage of development, and
different phases are recognised within this relationship over the life cycle
(Wieser, 1984
). Briefly, the
exponent is close to 1.0 during the early developmental stages, the period of
most rapid growth, and from then on the basal metabolic rates tend to follow
the surface rule, a pattern that prevails during most of the life cycle; a
crossover point of these two lines is reached after a given degree of adult
body mass is attained. This suggests that the slope of b=0.75 for
autumn activity in the first year cycle of the tegu may not constitute a
definite pattern for the relationship, being restricted to the transition from
a period of intense growth during entry into dormancy when food intake
declines and growth processes are halted to ensure that a suitable amount of
energy is deposited mostly as fat in the body stores. In this case, larger
animals with their larger fat deposits may reduce energy expenditure earlier
on entry into dormancy. Roughly, starting from a mean body mass of 15 g on
hatching (N=24), the young lizards grow at the fastest rate of 1.0 g
day-1 during summer, growth decreasing subsequently to 0.4 g
day-1 and to 0.2 g day-1 during the early and late
autumn months, until reaching a negative balance. After a prolonged pause in
the anabolic processes during winter dormancy, the young enter another period
of positive energy intake, their growth rates becoming increasingly higher in
spring when metabolic rates show a closer relationship with body mass.
Supportive data suggesting the downregulation of endocrine mechanisms that
promote somatic growth during metabolic depression were recently obtained with
ground squirrels (Spermophilus lateralis), an effect presumably
associated with the change in nutritional status during the hibernating period
(Schmidt and Kelley, 2001
).
Thus, while the exact significance of the mass exponent for aerobic metabolism
in early autumn activity remains unresolved, the significant shifts in scaling
pattern, both on entry and on arousal from the hypometabolic condition,
strongly suggest a body mass influence on the mechanisms of metabolic
depression in young tegus.
A seasonal pattern of lipid cycling coexists with the shifts in aerobic metabolism during the first annual cycle of tegu lizards, as revealed by the consistent changes in the mass of the visceral fat bodies and in the amount of fat in the subcutaneous tail deposits. Seasonal variation was also found in the potential for fatty acid oxidation in various tissues, as shown by the remarkable changes in HOAD activity, which increases several fold from late autumn to spring activity in liver tissue, becoming reduced in skeletal and heart muscle in dormant lizards. Apparently, these effects were independent of changes in tissue water content and strongly suggest the tissue-specific regulation of HOAD expression during the annual cycle, related to the processes of fat deposition and mobilization as well as to energy spare and overall metabolic depression during dormancy. The progressive increase of liver capacity for fatty acid oxidation would limit the use of modest glycogen reserves, and this pattern, together with the constancy of CS in most tissues examined, emphasises the aerobic nature of seasonal dormancy in the tegu.
Seasonal cycles of fat deposition and mobilisation correlate with food
availability in many reptiles, most lipids being stored subcutaneously and/or
in visceral fat bodies (Derickson,
1976). At most, fat body lipids make up 50% of the total storage
in the species examined, a variable fraction being allocated for gametogenesis
and other processes in preparation for reproduction during winter and in early
spring. The tegus reach reproductive maturity by their third year cycle; prior
to this point, changes in lipid stores would be closely related to energy
expenditure for whole body maintenance during the fasting period and for the
metabolic increase seen upon arousal. The allometric patterns for the changes
in
O2 and fat
body mass are coherent in this context. In late autumn, the slope for the
correlation between fat body mass and body mass is b=1.44, revealing
that for a body size difference of 3-4-fold, a disproportionately larger
amount of fat will accumulate in larger young individuals. By mid-winter, the
shift in allometric pattern to a close correlation with body mass suggests
that smaller animals drain fat from the fat body at lower rates than do larger
lizards. This is in good agreement with the greater depression of aerobic
metabolism seen in smaller young individuals. At the time of arousal, these
fat body deposits are virtually exhausted in the smaller individuals, while
substantial fat is still available in the larger tegus, causing the mass
exponent to shift to b>1 again. Given the importance of this fat
deposit, this may imply a limited capability of the smaller animals to sustain
the higher rates of metabolism required to actively hunt for food and to avoid
death by inanition upon return to activity. The events preparatory to dormancy
in the subsequent annual cycles are probably anticipated, given that the
arrest of routine activities generally occurs earlier, and usually extends
further, in individuals at later stages of development (H. R. Lopes and A. S.
Abe, unpublished observations).
The physiological events relating the size of the fat stores to energy
intake and expenditure are becoming clearer as a consequence of studies on
obesity in humans and laboratory mammals (for a review, see
Ahima and Flier, 2000) and its
correlates in hibernating mammals (Boyer
and Barnes, 1999
). The adipocyte is now established as the source
of numerous peptides secreted in the plasma, such as leptin, whose levels
correlate positively with total adipose mass. Leptin secretion may act as a
self-regulating system to sustain both a given degree of lipid reserve and
animal body mass. The action of leptin on energy expenditure is probably
exerted via the hypothalamus through an effect on the production of
thyroid hormones and by a direct effect on cellular respiration in peripheral
tissues (Reidy and Weber,
2000
). In hibernating mammals, the mechanisms of body mass control
may involve more complex interactions of leptin with other molecules that
effect a seasonal modulation of leptin sensitivity and an apparent
dissociation of its anorectic and metabolic effects
(Boyer et al., 1997
;
Klingenspor et al., 2000
). A
leptin-like molecule has been detected in the plasma and tissues of fish and
reptiles (Johnson et al.,
2000
; Niewiarowski et al.,
2000
); while its physiological function in lower vertebrates has
yet to be elucidated, these findings provide a promising scenario for the
investigation of potential mechanisms linking the control of body mass and
degree of adiposity to the energy expenditure during the annual cycle of young
tegus.
Other sources of energy for the dormant tegu are carbohydrates in the liver
and skeletal muscle. Liver glycogen in the late autumn averaged 223 µmol
g-1, accounting for 3.6% of the mass of the liver and corresponding
to less than half the liver glycogen reserve in overwintering amphibians and
other lower vertebrates that display varying capacities of hypoxia tolerance
(Boutilier et al., 1997;
Scapin and Giuseppe, 1994
;
Lutz and Nilsson, 1997
). A
rough calculation predicts that during dormancy a 100 g lizard could survive
for 2-3 days exclusively on liver carbohydrates for oxidative processes
(assuming that 0.84 litres of O2 are required per 1 g of
carbohydrate oxidized); the same calculation for fat deposited in the fat
bodies provides 170 days (assuming that 2.0 litres of O2 are
required per 1 g of fat oxidized). This carbohydrate store was reduced to a
limit of
60% in animals sampled halfway through the inactive period.
Plasma lactate remained nearly constant in relation to active animals, further
suggesting that glycolytic ATP production does not play an important role in
the long-term maintenance of dormant tegus, unlike the case in vertebrates in
which metabolic depression is associated with oxygen deprivation. However, the
small carbohydrate store in the liver may be essential during the initial
period of fasting, providing energy at reduced rates for glucose-dependent
tissues such as the brain, renal medulla and retina
(Guppy et al., 1987
) until the
availability of alternative substrates like ketone bodies increases in the
blood. The high ratio of HOAD to CS enzyme activities in the liver tissue of
dormant tegus and arousing animals suggests that the liver may be a site of
ketogenesis from the incomplete oxidation of fatty acids
(Stuart and Ballantyne, 1997
),
accounting for the increase in ß-hydroxybutyrate in the circulating
plasma in dormant tegus. Given the reduced glucose supply, this metabolite may
become a supplementary energy source for specific tissues in the tegu; in
agreement, our recent findings have revealed increased enzyme activity related
to the oxidation of ketone bodies in the brain of dormant tegus (J. E. de
Carvalho, M. S. C. Bianconcini and S. C. R. de Souza, unpublished
results).
The energy supply for such tissues, which typically show a preference for
carbohydrate as an energy substrate, may be even more challenged in young
tegus during emergence from the hypometabolic condition, when they must rely
on reduced body stores to increase metabolic rate and succeed in the search
for food. Despite the low levels of glucose in the circulating plasma,
glycogen content is increased several fold in the brain and in the heart of
dormant lizards compared with spring active individuals and may constitute a
readily available source of glucose for these high-priority tissues at the
onset of arousal. Notably, brain glycogen levels reached 2.6 mg g-1
(16 µmol glycosyl units g-1) in dormant lizards, a high content
typically found in the brain of anoxia-tolerant species as crucian carp,
goldfish and freshwater turtles (Lutz and
Nilsson, 1994). The delivery rate of glucose to the brain is
presumably lower during metabolic depression, and glycogen deposition in this
condition may be facilitated by a sustained potential of synthesis and reduced
rates of carbohydrate usage. At the onset of arousal (2-4 days), brain
glycogen decreased by 42% concomitant with a significant increase in blood
glucose and skeletal muscle glycogen, suggesting that another source of
glucose is made available for the tissues before feeding is reinitiated.
The substantial reduction in tail muscle total protein in arousing tegus
(50%) is consistent with the general idea that amino acids from protein
breakdown play an important role as precursors for glucose synthesis at the
end of a prolonged fasting period, in addition to glycerol from fatty acid
oxidation (Moon, 1988).
Protein is also an important source of energy for both large and small
hibernating mammals (Cherel et al.,
1995
; Tinker et al.,
1998
), and an adequate balance of fat and protein use is
apparently part of a common repertory in several spontaneous fasters, the
control of which is poorly known (Robin et
al., 1998
; Mellish and
Iverson, 2001
). The degree of protein catabolism correlates with
the size of the initial fat reserves in the species examined; the young tegus,
with their small size and limited capacity to store fat, may derive more
energy from protein during the fasting period, and particularly on arousal,
than at later stages of development. The high cumulative protein loss from
skeletal white muscle in the young may nevertheless compromise locomotion and
hunting capabilities upon return to activity. In hibernating bears, net
protein loss varies from 4% to 10% in two muscle types heavily used for
locomotion, with no significant muscle atrophy and only modest changes in
fibre type composition (Tinker et al.,
1998
); similarly, the seasonal fast in hedgehogs entails a loss in
total body protein of
10%, irrespective of the duration of hypothermia
(Cherel et al., 1995
). Thus,
the comparatively high loss of protein from the tail muscle of arousing tegus
strengthens the importance of this substrate as an energy source during the
fasting period of the first year cycle and implies a differential rate of
proteolysis in distinct muscle types, preventing the impairment of functions
like locomotion and lung ventilation.
Our results suggest a downregulatory mechanism that acts on the energy
metabolism of tegu lizards, in which body size apparently sets a limit to
substrate storage capacity in the small young and thus to their ability to
survive during the prolonged fast soon after hatching. In mammals, the
standard rates of metabolism are due mostly to mitochondrial respiration, of
which 80% is coupled to ATP synthesis and
20% is used to compensate
a proton leak across the inner membrane that bypasses ATP production
(Rolfe and Brown, 1997
). A
similar composition apparently occurs in ectotherms
(Hulbert and Else, 1981
;
Brand et al., 1991
). A
regulatory effect on the rate of ATP synthesis has been shown during the
hypometabolic condition by altering substrate supply to metabolic pathways
(Storey, 1997
) and by
influencing other molecular mechanisms that define the rates of ATP production
by the mitochondrial inner membrane
(Martin et al., 1999
;
St-Pierre et al., 2000
). The
ATP demand for protein synthesis, ion pumping and other energy-consuming
processes is reduced in several hibernators and facultative anaerobes, as
discussed in the reviews by Guppy et al.
(1994
) and by Boyer and Barnes
(1999
).
Attempts have been made to quantify the degree of metabolic change in
individual tissues of a few species, although no general trend is apparent
(Flanigan et al., 1991;
Land et al., 1993
;
Fuery et al., 1998
). In the
tegu, the ventilatory pattern becomes episodic during dormancy, with intervals
lasting up to 26 min at 17°C; even so, the relative cost of the work of
breathing would account for an estimated 50% of total metabolic rate
(Andrade and Abe, 2000
). This
high energy cost implies that the downregulation of cellular mechanisms is
largely unproportional in different tissues and even among different muscle
types in the tegu, involving tissue-specific modulation of substrate flux
through the metabolic pathways. Given that the skeletal muscle mass
constitutes a high percentage of the vertebrate body, a substantial reduction
of the total energy cost may result from the pronounced decrease of enzyme
activities related to substrate flux in the glycolytic pathway in this tissue,
as recently observed in dormant tegus (J. E. de Carvalho, M. S. C. Bianconcini
and S. C. R. de Souza, unpublished results). In hypoxic hibernating frogs,
there is a reduction of 50% in proton leak in skeletal muscle as a consequence
of a reduced electron flux through the mitochondrial membrane
(St-Pierre et al., 2000
); no
change, however, is detectable in normoxic frogs. While a role played by
uncoupling proteins on the regulatory change of proton leak rate remains
controversial, much interest has emerged regarding the paradoxical findings of
an increased expression of these proteins during induced starvation and its
association with fat metabolism (for a review, see
Duloo and Samec, 2000
;
Boss et al., 2000
). The
proteins may be involved in the regulation of lipid use as an energy fuel and
in the control of body mass, with a more pronounced effect in the
predominantly fast glycolytic white muscles, associated with their greater
capacity to alternate between glucose and lipids as substrates. Thus, the size
of the adipose tissue mass may affect both the degree of energy expenditure
and substrate preference of the large skeletal muscle mass in animals that
spontaneously undergo fasting periods during their annual cycle.
To our knowledge, a scaling influence on the magnitude of metabolic
depression has not yet been the subject of investigation at the cellular
level, and therefore the regulatory mechanisms involved are even less clear.
In a phylogenetic context, many cellular processes are known to be
allometrically related to body mass in the same way as is standard metabolism
(Else and Hulbert, 1985;
Porter et al., 1996
). Hulbert
and Else (2000
) propose that a
possible unifying factor in this arrangement may be the amount and lipid
composition of the cell membranes. Besides the body mass effect, these authors
consider that such factors are also under the influence of ontogenetic
changes, dietary manipulation and stress conditions, with the ensuing effects
being exerted on the activities of membrane-bound proteins, such as sodium
pumps and mitochondrial uncoupling proteins. Thus, the potential for a
regulatory effect on a variety of energy-demanding processes would endow the
cell membranes with the capacity to influence energy expenditure during
metabolic depression as well, as shown in a study with aestivating snails
(Stuart et al., 1998
).
According to this idea, a change in cell membrane structure and function would
modify the cost of living while maintaining the same factorial proportion to
body size. Given the results obtained with the tegu, however, it is tempting
to speculate that the disproportionate mass of adipose tissue in young
individuals may transmit a signal of distinct amplitude to the tissues in
which energy is consumed, thus promoting a deviation in allometric pattern
concomitant with the depressing effect.
In conclusion, the present study contributes to our understanding of the mechanisms underlying metabolic depression associated with spontaneous fasting in terrestrial reptiles and provides perspective on the means by which seasonal events are conciliated with growth and developmental changes during the early stages of the tegu lizard's life cycle. The results obtained should aid in elucidating potential mechanisms by which the balance between body mass and energy expenditure may be modulated, favouring a close relationship with the size of available substrate stores in a state that allows no energy intake and demands reduced expenditure.
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