Affiliation:
1. Arctic Seasonal Timekeeping Initiative (ASTI), Arctic Chronobiology and Physiology, Department of Arctic and Marine Biology , Tromsø, NO-9037 , Norway
2. , BFE, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway Department of Arctic and Marine Biology , Tromsø, NO-9037 , Norway
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Hibernation is an extreme state of seasonal energy conservation, reducing metabolic rate to as little as 1% of the active state. During the hibernation season, many species of hibernating mammals cycle repeatedly between the active (aroused) and hibernating (torpid) states (T–A cycling), using brown adipose tissue (BAT) to drive cyclical rewarming. The regulatory mechanisms controlling this process remain undefined but are presumed to involve thermoregulatory centres in the hypothalamus. Here, we used the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus), and high-resolution monitoring of BAT, core body temperature and ventilation rate, to sample at precisely defined phases of the T–A cycle. Using c-fos as a marker of cellular activity, we show that although the dorsomedial hypothalamus is active during torpor entry, neither it nor the pre-optic area shows any significant changes during the earliest stages of spontaneous arousal. Contrastingly, in three non-neuronal sites previously linked to control of metabolic physiology over seasonal and daily time scales – the choroid plexus, pars tuberalis and third ventricle tanycytes – peak c-fos expression is seen at arousal initiation. We suggest that through their sensitivity to factors in the blood or cerebrospinal fluid, these sites may mediate metabolic feedback-based initiation of the spontaneous arousal process.
Funder
Tromsø Forskningsstiftelse
European Union
Arctic Seasonal Timekeeping Initiative
UiT
European Research Council||Tromsø Forskningsstiftelse|| Universitetet i Tromsø
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. ECR Spotlight – Fredrik Markussen;Journal of Experimental Biology;2024-05-15
2. Sensor cells in the brain wake up hibernating hamsters;Journal of Experimental Biology;2024-05-15