Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
: 20 | 50 | 100
1 - 11 de 11
1.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 17954, 2021 09 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34518616

Ghrelin, a circulating orexigenic hormone secreted from the stomach, stimulates appetite and food intake by activating the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. Administration of exogenous ghrelin exerts anabolic effects, causing weight gain, increased adiposity, and decreased metabolism. Body temperature (BT), which is determined by the balance of heat production and heat loss, must be strictly regulated to maintain proper cellular function and metabolism. However, the role of ghrelin in thermoregulation remains unclear. In this study, we found that ghrelin was essential for decreasing BT when mice are placed under calorie restriction. Elevated ghrelin concentrations induced by fasting correlated with significant decreases in BT, a hibernation-like state called torpor. Ghrelin-deficient (Ghrl-/-) animals could not enter torpor. The BT of Ghrl-/- mice also remained high under restricted feeding, but the animals gradually entered precipitous hypothermia, indicating thermoregulatory impairment. These effects of ghrelin on thermoregulation were the result of suppression of sympathetic nervous system activity input to brown adipose tissue; in the absence of ghrelin, it was not possible to suppress uncoupling protein 1 (ucp1) expression and decrease BT in low-energy states. Together, these findings demonstrate that ghrelin is an essential circulating hormone involved in lowering BT.


Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Body Temperature/physiology , Energy Metabolism/physiology , Fasting/physiology , Ghrelin/metabolism , Torpor/physiology , Adiposity/physiology , Animals , Appetite/drug effects , Appetite/physiology , Blood Glucose , Body Temperature/drug effects , Body Temperature Regulation/drug effects , Circadian Rhythm/drug effects , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Energy Metabolism/drug effects , Ghrelin/genetics , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Oligopeptides/pharmacology , Torpor/drug effects , Uncoupling Protein 1/metabolism , Weight Gain/drug effects , Weight Gain/physiology
2.
Life Sci Space Res (Amst) ; 28: 18-21, 2021 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33612175

The maintenance of pharmacological torpor and hypothermia (body temperature 28 °C - 33 °C) in rats for a week is presented. For this purpose, our laboratory has developed a device (BioFeedback-2) for the feed-back controlled multiple injections of small doses of a pharmacological composition that we created earlier. On the 7th day, the rat spontaneously come out of the pharmacological torpor, the body temperature returned to normal, and on the 8th day, the animal could consume food and water. The proposed approach for maintaining multi-day pharmacological torpor can be applied in medicine, as well as for protecting astronauts during long missions in space.


Hypothermia/chemically induced , Torpor/drug effects , Animals , Body Temperature/drug effects , Diphenhydramine/administration & dosage , Drug Combinations , Drug Delivery Systems/instrumentation , Feedback , Heart Rate/drug effects , Injections, Intravenous , Ivabradine/administration & dosage , Magnesium Sulfate/administration & dosage , Male , Phenothiazines/administration & dosage , Propranolol/administration & dosage , Propylthiouracil/administration & dosage , Rats, Wistar , Reserpine/administration & dosage , Serotonin/administration & dosage , Telemetry/veterinary
3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 1340, 2021 01 14.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33446684

Omega 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) influence metabolism and thermogenesis in non-hibernators. How omega 3 PUFAs influence Arctic Ground Squirrels (AGS) during hibernation is unknown. Prior to hibernation we fed AGS chow composed of an omega 6:3 ratio approximately 1:1 (high in omega 3 PUFA, termed Balanced Diet), or an omega 6:3 ratio of 5:1 (Standard Rodent Chow), and measured the influence of diet on core body temperature (Tb), brown adipose tissue (BAT) mass, fatty acid profiles of BAT, white adipose tissue (WAT) and plasma as well as hypothalamic endocannabinoid and endocannabinoid-like bioactive fatty acid amides during hibernation. Results show feeding a diet high in omega 3 PUFAs, with a more balanced omega 6:3 ratio, increases AGS Tb in torpor. We found the diet-induced increase in Tb during torpor is most easily explained by an increase in the mass of BAT deposits of Balanced Diet AGS. The increase in BAT mass is associated with elevated levels of metabolites DHA and EPA in tissue and plasma suggesting that these omega 3 PUFAs may play a role in thermogenesis during torpor. While we did not observe diet-induced change in endocannabinoids, we do report altered hypothalamic levels of some endocannabinoids, and endocannabinoid-like compounds, during hibernation.


Adipose Tissue, Brown/metabolism , Fatty Acids, Omega-3/pharmacology , Sciuridae/metabolism , Thermogenesis/drug effects , Torpor/drug effects , Animals , Fatty Acids, Omega-3/metabolism
4.
Life Sci ; 219: 190-198, 2019 Feb 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30658098

AIMS: To initiate a state of artificial torpor we suggested a pharmacological multi-targeting strategy for simulation of the physiological pattern of natural hibernation including a significant reduction in heart rate, respiratory rate, body temperature and oxygen consumption as well as a decline in brain activity known as torpor. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have developed a composition which initiates a pharmacologically induced torpor-like state (PITS-composition), made up of eight therapeutic agents, inert gas xenon and lipid emulsion served as a drug vehicle. KEY FINDINGS: After a single intravenous injection to rats, PITS-composition causes a rapid decline in heart rate followed by a steady decrease in body temperature from about 38.5 °C to 31.5 °C, at ambient temperature of 22 °C-23 °C. The hypothermic state may continue on average for 16-17 h with the subsequent spontaneous return of heart rate and body temperature to the initial values. In the open field test at torpor the motility, rearing and grooming were suppressed but 4-8 days later they were restored. SIGNIFICANCE: Suspended animation states, including natural hibernation or pharmacologically induced synthetic torpor are of special attention of medicine, since it may improve survival rate after cardiac arrest, brain hemorrhage and ischemia, and during long-term space traveling. The suggested here multi-targeting strategy made possible to develop the pharmacological composition able, after a single intravenous injection, to initiate long, stable and reversible hypothermia and torpor at room temperature. After the torpor, animals were able to spontaneously restore both physiological parameters, and behavioral reactions.


Hypothermia/chemically induced , Torpor/drug effects , Animals , Body Temperature/drug effects , Brain/drug effects , Diphenhydramine/administration & dosage , Diphenhydramine/pharmacology , Drug Combinations , Heart Rate/drug effects , Injections, Intravenous , Ivabradine/administration & dosage , Ivabradine/pharmacology , Magnesium Sulfate/administration & dosage , Magnesium Sulfate/pharmacology , Male , Oxygen Consumption/drug effects , Phenothiazines/administration & dosage , Phenothiazines/pharmacology , Phospholipids/administration & dosage , Phospholipids/pharmacology , Propranolol/administration & dosage , Propranolol/pharmacology , Propylthiouracil/administration & dosage , Propylthiouracil/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reserpine/administration & dosage , Reserpine/pharmacology , Respiratory Rate/drug effects , Serotonin/administration & dosage , Serotonin/pharmacology , Sorbitol/administration & dosage , Sorbitol/pharmacology , Xenon/administration & dosage , Xenon/pharmacology
5.
J Therm Biol ; 71: 189-194, 2018 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29301689

The initiation of torpor is supposed to be related to the availability of metabolic fuels. Studies on metabolic fuel inhibition of glucose by using 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG) or fatty acid by mercaptoacetate (MA) in heterothermic mammals produced mixed outcomes. To examine the roles of availability of glucose and fatty acid in the initiation of torpor in desert hamsters (Phodopus roborovskii), we intraperitoneally administrated 2DG and MA to summer-acclimated male hamsters while body temperature (Tb), metabolic rate (MR) and respiratory quotient (RQ) were simultaneously recorded to monitor their thermoregulatory response. 2DG induced a reversible reduction of Tb in desert hamsters both at ambient temperature (Ta) of 23°C and 5°C. At Ta of 23°C, Tb, MR and RQ decreased in a dose-dependent manner with a large Tb-Ta differential (> 6.5°C) and a lowest Tb of 28.0°C which were comparable to those in fasted hamsters. At Ta of 5°C, 2DG-treated hamsters also decreased Tb to the same level as at Ta 23°C, but MR was significantly higher than that at Ta of 23°C at each dose, suggesting doses of 2DG directly affected the hypothalamic Tb set-point. Different from fasted hamsters which maintain normothermic at Ta of 5°C, 2DG-treated hamsters showed a substantial reduction of Tb at Ta 5°C, indicating an overwhelming effect on the thermoregulatory system regardless of Ta. Furthermore, the rapid decrease of Tb and outstretched body posture in 2DG-treated hamsters suggest that the effects of 2DG were not simply mimicking the torpor pathways but that other mechanisms are involved. Interestingly, MA failed to induce a torpor-like state in male desert hamsters. Our results suggest that availability of glucose rather than fatty acid plays an important role for initiation of torpor in desert hamsters.


Antimetabolites/pharmacology , Body Temperature/drug effects , Deoxyglucose/pharmacology , Phodopus/physiology , Thioglycolates/pharmacology , Animals , Basal Metabolism , Cricetinae , Hypothalamus/physiology , Male , Respiration , Torpor/drug effects
6.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 234(2): 173-184, 2017 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27933367

Hypothermia and hypometabolism (hypometabothermia) normally observed during natural hibernation and torpor, allow animals to protect their body and brain against the damaging effects of adverse environment. A similar state of hypothermia can be achieved under artificial conditions through physical cooling or pharmacological effects directed at suppression of metabolism and the processes of thermoregulation. In these conditions called torpor-like states, the mammalian ability to recover from stroke, heart attack, and traumatic injuries greatly increases. Therefore, the development of therapeutic methods for different pathologies is a matter of great concern. With the discovery of the antipsychotic drug chlorpromazine in the 1950s of the last century, the first attempts to create a pharmacologically induced state of hibernation for therapeutic purposes were made. That was the beginning of numerous studies in animals and the broad use of therapeutic hypothermia in medicine. Over the last years, many new agents have been discovered which were capable of lowering the body temperature and inhibiting the metabolism. The psychotropic agents occupy a significant place among them, which, in our opinion, is not sufficiently recognized in the contemporary literature. In this review, we summarized the latest achievements related to the ability of modern antipsychotics to target specific receptors in the brain, responsible for the initiation of hypometabothermia.


Antipsychotic Agents/pharmacology , Brain/drug effects , Hibernation/drug effects , Hypothermia/chemically induced , Torpor/drug effects , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/adverse effects , Body Temperature/drug effects , Body Temperature/physiology , Body Temperature Regulation/drug effects , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Brain/physiology , Hibernation/physiology , Humans , Hypothermia/diagnosis , Hypothermia/physiopathology , Receptors, Dopamine/physiology , Receptors, Serotonin/physiology , Torpor/physiology
7.
J Comp Physiol B ; 187(4): 677-688, 2017 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27830334

One of the most obvious physiological changes accompanying seasonal heterothermy in mammals is a fattening stage preceding periods of resource scarcity. This phenomenon reflects the interplay of both diet and physiology. Though the accrual of fat stores is known to be essential for overwintering in some species, the influence of diet on the physiology of torpor is not fully understood. Results from captive studies in heterothermic rodents and marsupials have indicated that when autumn diets are enriched with polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), animals receiving these diets experience deeper and more frequent torpor bouts than their counterparts receiving a control diet. Our study investigates this potential effect of dietary composition in animals that use daily torpor rather than prolonged torpor (i.e., hibernation). In so doing, we investigate the degree to which dietary effects on torpor are restricted to cold-adapted rodents and marsupials, or are a more general feature of mammalian heterothermy. We examined the effects of a PUFA diet and a control diet on the thermoregulation of one of the few species of primates known to use daily torpor: the grey mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus). Though the results of this study are largely inconclusive regarding the impact of dietary manipulations on torpor frequency and duration, we nonetheless find that the propensity of animals to enter torpor is directly influenced by age and seasonal changes in body mass, and thus reflect important physiological aspects of flexible thermoregulatory responses.


Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena/physiology , Cheirogaleidae/physiology , Torpor/physiology , Age Factors , Animals , Body Temperature Regulation , Body Weight , Cholesterol/metabolism , Diet , Eating , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/pharmacology , Male , Seasons , Torpor/drug effects
8.
Horm Behav ; 75: 120-9, 2015 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26435475

Thyroid hormones (TH) play a key role in regulation of seasonal as well as acute changes in metabolism. Djungarian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) adapt to winter by multiple changes in behaviour and physiology including spontaneous daily torpor, a state of hypometabolism and hypothermia. We investigated effects of systemic TH administration and ablation on the torpor behaviour in Djungarian hamsters adapted to short photoperiod. Hyperthyroidism was induced by giving T4 or T3 and hypothyroidism by giving methimazole (MMI) and sodium perchlorate via drinking water. T3 treatment increased water, food intake and body mass, whereas MMI had the opposite effect. Continuous recording of body temperature revealed that low T3 serum concentrations increased torpor incidence, lowered Tb and duration, whereas high T3 serum concentrations inhibited torpor expression. Gene expression of deiodinases (dio) and uncoupling proteins (ucp) were analysed by qPCR in hypothalamus, brown adipose tissue (BAT) and skeletal muscle. Expression of dio2, the enzyme generating T3 by deiodination of T4, and ucps, involved in thermoregulation, indicated a tissue specific response to treatment. Torpor per se decreased dio2 expression irrespective of treatment or tissue, suggesting low intracellular T3 concentrations during torpor. Down regulation of ucp1 and ucp3 during torpor might be a factor for the inhibition of BAT thermogenesis. Hypothalamic gene expression of neuropeptide Y, propopiomelanocortin and somatostatin, involved in feeding behaviour and energy balance, were not affected by treatment. Taken together our data indicate a strong effect of thyroid hormones on torpor, suggesting that lowered intracellular T3 concentrations in peripheral tissues promote torpor.


Phodopus/physiology , Thyroid Hormones/metabolism , Thyroid Hormones/pharmacology , Torpor/drug effects , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects , Adipose Tissue, Brown/drug effects , Adipose Tissue, Brown/metabolism , Animals , Body Temperature/physiology , Body Temperature Regulation/drug effects , Body Temperature Regulation/genetics , Cricetinae , Eating/drug effects , Eating/genetics , Energy Metabolism/drug effects , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Energy Metabolism/physiology , Female , Hypothalamus/drug effects , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Male , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Phodopus/genetics , Photoperiod , Seasons , Torpor/genetics
9.
PLoS One ; 10(8): e0136113, 2015.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26295351

BACKGROUND: Therapeutic hypothermia is used to reduce ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) during organ transplantation and major surgery, but does not fully prevent organ injury. Interestingly, hibernating animals undergo repetitive periods of low body temperature called 'torpor' without signs of organ injury. Recently, we identified an essential role of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in entrance into torpor and preservation of kidney integrity during hibernation. A torpor-like state can be induced pharmacologically by injecting 5'-Adenosine monophosphate (5'-AMP). The mechanism by which 5'-AMP leads to the induction of a torpor-like state, and the role of H2S herein, remains to be unraveled. Therefore, we investigated whether induction of a torpor-like state by 5-AMP depends on H2S production. METHODS: To study the role of H2S on the induction of torpor, amino-oxyacetic acid (AOAA), a non-specific inhibitor of H2S, was administered before injection with 5'-AMP to block endogenous H2S production in Syrian hamster. To assess the role of H2S on maintenance of torpor induced by 5'-AMP, additional animals were injected with AOAA during torpor. KEY RESULTS: During the torpor-like state induced by 5'-AMP, the expression of H2S- synthesizing enzymes in the kidneys and plasma levels of H2S were increased. Blockade of these enzymes inhibited the rise in the plasma level of H2S, but neither precluded torpor nor induced arousal. Remarkably, blockade of endogenous H2S production was associated with increased renal injury. CONCLUSIONS: Induction of a torpor-like state by 5'-AMP does not depend on H2S, although production of H2S seems to attenuate renal injury. Unraveling the mechanisms by which 5'-AMP reduces the metabolism without organ injury may allow optimization of current strategies to limit (hypothermic) IRI and improve outcome following organ transplantation, major cardiac and brain surgery.


Adenosine Monophosphate/pharmacology , Hydrogen Sulfide/metabolism , Torpor , Adenosine Monophosphate/administration & dosage , Adenosine Monophosphate/metabolism , Aminooxyacetic Acid/pharmacology , Animals , Creatine/blood , Creatine/metabolism , Cricetinae , Hydrogen Sulfide/antagonists & inhibitors , Hydrogen Sulfide/blood , Hypothermia, Induced , Kidney/drug effects , Kidney/metabolism , Kidney/pathology , Male , Mesocricetus , Torpor/drug effects
10.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 309(6): R668-74, 2015 Sep 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26157058

Siberian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) show spontaneous daily torpor only after ∼2 mo in winter-like short photoperiods (SP). Although some SP-induced hormonal changes have been demonstrated to be necessary for the occurrence of seasonal torpor, the whole set of preconditions is still unknown. Recent findings provide evidence that the hypothalamic pituitary growth axis is involved in endocrine responses to SP exposure in the photoperiodic hamsters. To examine whether suppression of growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) secretion affects the incidence of daily torpor, we used two somatostatin receptor agonists, pasireotide (SOM230) and octreotide, with different affinity profiles for receptor subtypes. Pasireotide strikingly increased the torpor frequency in male hamsters compared with sham-treated controls, and torpor duration was often increased, which in some cases exceeded 12 h. In contrast, administration of octreotide reduced the body weight of SP hamsters but had only a marginal effect on torpor frequency in males and no effect in females. Together with measured concentrations of circulating IGF-1, the present results strongly suggest that reduced activity of the GH/IGF-1 axis is not critical for stimulation of torpor expression but activation of specific somatostatin receptors is critical. This putative role for certain somatostatin receptor subtypes in torpor induction provides a promising new approach to unravel the endocrine mechanisms of torpor regulation.


Receptors, Somatostatin/drug effects , Torpor/drug effects , Animals , Body Temperature , Body Weight , Cricetinae , Female , Hypothalamus/drug effects , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Male , Octreotide/pharmacology , Phodopus , RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis , Seasons , Somatostatin/analogs & derivatives , Somatostatin/pharmacology
11.
Diabetologia ; 58(4): 819-27, 2015 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25563725

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Nutrient overabundance and diminished physical activity underlie the epidemic of obesity and its consequences of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. These same phenomena, obesity and insulin resistance, are also observed in mammals as they ready themselves for the nutrient deprivation of winter, yet their plasma glucose does not rise. Given the role of silent information regulator 2 (Sir2) and its mammalian orthologue, Sirt1, in survival and life extension during energy deprivation, we hypothesised that enhancing its activity may reduce the insensible energy loss engendered by hyperglycaemia and glycosuria. METHODS: At 8 weeks of age, db/db and db/m mice were randomised to receive the SIRT1 activator SRT3025 milled in chow (3.18 g/kg) or regular chow and followed for a further 12 weeks. RESULTS: When compared with vehicle, SIRT1 activation greatly improved glycaemic control, augmented plasma insulin concentrations, increased pancreatic islet beta cell mass and elevated hepatic expression of the beta cell growth factor, betatrophin in db/db mice. Despite the dramatic reduction in hyperglycaemia, db/db mice displayed worsening insulin resistance, diminished physical activity and further weight gain. These findings along with reduced food intake and reduction in body temperature resembled torpor and hibernation. By contrast, SIRT1 activation conferred only minimal changes in non-diabetic db/m mice. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: While reducing hyperglycaemia and promoting beta cell expansion, enhancing the activity of SIRT1 facilitates a phenotypic change in a db/db mouse model of diabetes to one that more closely resembles the physiological state of torpor or hibernation.


Anilides/pharmacology , Blood Glucose/drug effects , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/prevention & control , Enzyme Activators/pharmacology , Hypoglycemic Agents/pharmacology , Obesity/drug therapy , Sirtuin 1/metabolism , Thiazoles/pharmacology , Torpor/drug effects , Angiopoietin-Like Protein 8 , Angiopoietin-like Proteins , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/blood , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/enzymology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/genetics , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/physiopathology , Disease Models, Animal , Enzyme Activation , Hepatocytes/drug effects , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Insulin/blood , Insulin Resistance , Insulin-Secreting Cells/drug effects , Insulin-Secreting Cells/metabolism , Male , Mice, Mutant Strains , Obesity/blood , Obesity/enzymology , Obesity/genetics , Obesity/physiopathology , Peptide Hormones/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Time Factors
...