证据在羽毛:一种通过检测羽毛中葡萄糖醛酸乙酯检测鸟类饮食中乙醇暴露的方法。

Ecological and evolutionary physiology Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-09 DOI:10.1086/735669
Cynthia Y Wang-Claypool, Ammon Corl, Joseph Jones, Jimmy A McGuire, Rauri C K Bowie, Robert Dudley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

乙醇是一种天然存在的分子,通过酵母发酵富含糖的食物产生。乙醇分解代谢之后会产生次级代谢物,如乙基葡萄糖醛酸酯(EtG),可以通过测量来提供饮食暴露的回顾性观点。迄今为止,除了人类和其他几种哺乳动物分类群之外,还没有研究过这种分子在脊椎动物中的发生。在这里,我们描述了一种使用质谱法检测鸟类羽毛和肝脏中EtG存在的方法。经常食用水果和花蜜的鸟类可能因此长期摄入乙醇。我们预测,饮食中富含可发酵糖的鸟类会消耗生理上显著量的乙醇,因此积累可检测水平的EtG。在17种不同饮食的鸟类中测试了EtG测定法的适用性。对17种鸟类中的10种进行了鸟类羽毛检测,结果呈阳性;五种研究物种中有两种的肝脏中也存在大量的EtG。我们发现EtG不仅存在于食蜜性蜂鸟中,也存在于其他营养生态位(3种花岗动物、1种杂食动物、3种无脊椎动物和1种脊椎动物)的物种中。因此,从饮食中暴露于乙醇可能比以前认识到的要广泛得多,而且鸟类营养生态的多种特征(例如,通过摄入猎物的二次消费)可能有助于其在组织中的积累。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Proof Is in the Plumage: A Method for Detecting Dietary Ethanol Exposure in Birds by Testing for Ethyl Glucuronide in Feathers.

AbstractEthanol is a naturally occurring molecule produced via fermentation of sugar-rich foods by yeast. Ethanol catabolism is followed by production of secondary metabolites such as ethyl glucuronide (EtG), which can be measured to provide a retrospective view of dietary exposure. To date, occurrence of this molecule has not been studied in vertebrates other than humans and several other mammalian taxa. Here, we describe a method of testing for the presence of EtG in bird feathers and livers using mass spectrometry. Birds that regularly consume fruit and nectar may accordingly be ingesting ethanol on a chronic basis. We predicted that avian species with diets rich in fermentable sugars consume physiologically significant amounts of ethanol and therefore accumulate detectable levels of EtG. The suitability of EtG assays was tested across 17 avian species representing a diversity of diets. Assays of avian feathers yielded positive results for 10 of 17 avian species; EtG was also present at substantial levels in the livers of two of five study species. We found that EtG was present in nectarivorous hummingbirds but also in species in other trophic niches (three granivores, one omnivore, three invertivores, and one vertivore). Dietary exposure to ethanol may thus be much more widespread than has previously been recognized, and diverse features of avian nutritional ecology (e.g., secondary consumption via ingestion of prey items) may contribute to its accumulation in tissues.

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