Author:
Sigurdson S. Lynn,Himms-Hagen Jean
Abstract
The oxygen consumption of cold-acclimated Syrian hamsters (measured in pentobarbital-anaesthetized animals) was 59% greater than that of warm-acclimated hamsters. Upon return of the cold-acclimated hamsters to 24 °C, the elevated metabolic rate declined slowly, with half-life of approximately 1 day. The increase correlated well with our previous finding of a four-fold increase in serum 3,5,3′-triiodothyronine concentration in cold-acclimated hamsters and the slow decline in concentration of this hormone during deacclimation. Daily administration of T3 (for 7 days) to warm-acclimated hamsters at 24 °C resulted in a similar increase in oxygen consumption that persisted 1 day after the last injection and had disappeared by 7 days after the last injection. We conclude that the high concentration of serum triiodothyronine in the cold-acclimated hamster exerts a thermogenic effect that probably contributes to thermoregulatory thermogenesis in the cold.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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