全巢食物限制对发育中的斑胸草雀有持续的生理影响。

IF 3.3 4区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Victoria M. Coutts, Kevin Pham, Alexander J. Hoffman, Haruka Wada
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在一个快速变化的世界中,食物资源变得越来越有限,导致不可预测的营养压力发作和持续时间。许多研究表明,发育性营养压力可以永久性地改变一系列生理、形态或行为特征,然而环境中低食物供应的表型效应可能取决于亲代照顾的模式和程度。例如,我们之前的工作表明,斑胸草雀(Taeniopygia guttata castanotis)的父母可以缓冲后代的食物限制,以保持自己的体重为代价,最大限度地减少对后代生长的负面影响。为了进一步评估全巢限食对后代的影响,我们研究了斑胸草雀幼雏在孵化后60天内暴露于自由饮食或40%限制饮食的短期和长期生理和形态特征的变化。具体地说,我们测量了在整个发育过程和成年期的结节脂肪、肾上腺皮质反应和葡萄糖水平,以及成年期的体重,以检查任何潜在或持续的影响。总的来说,来自食物限制巢的幼鸟的皮质酮和葡萄糖基线明显高于对照组,这表明先前观察到的亲代缓冲可能不足以减轻食物限制的有害影响。此外,与对照组相比,限制食物的鸟类在成年期的体重较低,这表明在成年期表现出潜在的影响,可能是由于治疗期间观察到的生理成本和治疗后释放造成的。荷叶脂肪、葡萄糖反应和肾上腺皮质反应在实验组之间没有差异。在不同的处理组之间,雏鸟的体型差异也没有差异,而且以前观察到的在食物限制的巢穴中父母的补偿与成年后的雏鸟体重无关。最后,成年期的体重和基线皮质酮之间存在显著的负相关,这表明尽管在治疗期间保持了生长和体重,但成年期的能量可能已经从生长和体重维持重新定向到不同的过程中。这项研究进一步支持了在治疗结束后测量特征的必要性,以确定压力源的持续影响,并强调父母不能完全缓冲其后代在不利环境条件下的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Whole nest food restriction has persistent physiological effects in developing zebra finches

In a rapidly changing world, food resources are becoming more limited, leading to unpredictable bouts and durations of nutritional stress. Many studies indicate that developmental nutritional stress can permanently alter a suite of physiological, morphological, or behavioral traits, yet the phenotypic effects of low food supply in the environment may vary depending on the mode and degree of parental care. For example, our previous work suggests that zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis) parents can buffer offspring from food restriction, minimizing negative effects on offspring growth, at the cost of maintaining their own body mass. To evaluate the effects of whole nest food restriction on the offspring further, we investigated short- and long-term changes in physiological and morphological traits of zebra finch young exposed to either an ad libitum diet or a 40% restricted diet as nestlings and juveniles until 60 days post-hatch. Specifically, we measured furculum fat, the adrenocortical response, and glucose levels throughout development and into adulthood as well as body mass in adulthood to examine any latent or persistent effect. Young from the food-restricted nests overall had significantly higher baseline corticosterone and glucose compared to controls, suggesting that the previously observed parental buffering may not have been sufficient to mitigate the deleterious effects of food restriction. Furthermore, food-restricted birds had lower body mass compared to controls in adulthood, suggesting that there was a latent effect that manifested in adulthood, potentially due to the physiological costs observed during treatment and the later release of treatment. Furculum fat, the glucose response, and the adrenocortical response did not differ between experimental groups. There was also no difference in brood body size variance between treatment groups, and previously observed parental compensation in food-restricted nests did not correlate with offspring body mass in adulthood. Lastly, there was a significant negative relationship between body mass and baseline corticosterone in adulthood, suggesting that although growth and body mass were maintained during treatment, energy may have been redirected from growth and body mass maintenance to different processes in adulthood. This study further supports the need for measuring traits after treatment ends to determine persistent effects of stressors and highlights that parents cannot fully buffer their offspring from adverse environmental conditions.

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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroendocrinology
Journal of Neuroendocrinology 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
137
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Neuroendocrinology provides the principal international focus for the newest ideas in classical neuroendocrinology and its expanding interface with the regulation of behavioural, cognitive, developmental, degenerative and metabolic processes. Through the rapid publication of original manuscripts and provocative review articles, it provides essential reading for basic scientists and clinicians researching in this rapidly expanding field. In determining content, the primary considerations are excellence, relevance and novelty. While Journal of Neuroendocrinology reflects the broad scientific and clinical interests of the BSN membership, the editorial team, led by Professor Julian Mercer, ensures that the journal’s ethos, authorship, content and purpose are those expected of a leading international publication.
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