Limits to sustained energy intake. XXXIV. Can the heat dissipation limit (HDL) theory explain reproductive aging?

Author:

Grosiak Marta12ORCID,Koteja Paweł12ORCID,Hambly Catherine3ORCID,Speakman John R.34ORCID,Sadowska Edyta T.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Environmental Sciences 1 , Faculty of Biology , , Krakow 30-387 , Poland

2. Jagiellonian University 1 , Faculty of Biology , , Krakow 30-387 , Poland

3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen 2 , Aberdeen AB24 2TZ , UK

4. Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences 3 , Shenzhen 518055 , People's Republic of China

Abstract

ABSTRACT According to the heat dissipation limit (HDL) theory, reproductive performance is limited by the capacity to dissipate excess heat. We tested the novel hypotheses that (1) the age-related decline in reproductive performance is due to an age-related decrease of heat dissipation capacity and (2) the limiting mechanism is more severe in animals with high metabolic rates. We used bank voles (Myodes glareolus) from lines selected for high swim-induced aerobic metabolic rate, which have also increased basal metabolic rate, and unselected control lines. Adult females from three age classes – young (4 months), middle-aged (9 months) and old (16 months) – were maintained at room temperature (20°C), and half of the lactating females were shaved to increase heat dissipation capacity. Old females from both selection lines had a decreased litter size, mass and growth rate. The peak-lactation average daily metabolic rate was higher in shaved than in unshaved mothers, and this difference was more profound among old than young and middle-aged voles (P=0.02). In females with large litters, milk production tended to be higher in shaved (least squares mean, LSM±s.e.: 73.0±4.74 kJ day−1) than in unshaved voles (61.8±4.78 kJ day−1; P=0.05), but there was no significan"t effect of fur removal on the growth rate [4.47±2.29 g (4 days−1); P=0.45]. The results provide mixed support of the HDL theory and no support for the hypotheses linking the differences in reproductive aging with either a deterioration in thermoregulatory capability or genetically based differences in metabolic rate.

Funder

Narodowe Centrum Nauki

Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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