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Search: WFRF:(Giroud Sylvain)

  • Result 1-7 of 7
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2.
  • Ebert, Thomas, et al. (author)
  • Insights in the regulation of trimetylamine N-oxide production using a comparative biomimetic approach suggest a metabolic switch in hibernating bears
  • 2020
  • In: Scientific Reports. - : Nature Publishing Group. - 2045-2322. ; 10:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Experimental studies suggest involvement of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) in the aetiology of cardiometabolic diseases and chronic kidney disease (CKD), in part via metabolism of ingested food. Using a comparative biomimetic approach, we have investigated circulating levels of the gut metabolites betaine, choline, and TMAO in human CKD, across animal species as well as during hibernation in two animal species. Betaine, choline, and TMAO levels were associated with renal function in humans and differed significantly across animal species. Free-ranging brown bears showed a distinct regulation pattern with an increase in betaine (422%) and choline (18%) levels during hibernation, but exhibited undetectable levels of TMAO. Free-ranging brown bears had higher betaine, lower choline, and undetectable TMAO levels compared to captive brown bears. Endogenously produced betaine may protect bears and garden dormice during the vulnerable hibernating period. Carnivorous eating habits are linked to TMAO levels in the animal kingdom. Captivity may alter the microbiota and cause a subsequent increase of TMAO production. Since free-ranging bears seems to turn on a metabolic switch that shunts choline to generate betaine instead of TMAO, characterisation and understanding of such an adaptive switch could hold clues for novel treatment options in burden of lifestyle diseases, such as CKD.
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3.
  • Evans, Alina L., et al. (author)
  • Body mass is associated with hibernation length, body temperature, and heart rate in free-ranging brown bears
  • 2023
  • In: Frontiers in Zoology. - : BioMed Central (BMC). - 1742-9994. ; 20:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Despite centuries of research, debate remains on the scaling of metabolic rate to mass especially for intraspecific cases. The high variation of body mass within brown bears presents a unique opportunity to study the intraspecific effects of body mass on physiological variables. The amplitude of metabolic rate reduction in hibernators is dependent on body mass of the species. Small hibernators have high metabolic rates when euthermic but experience a drastic decrease in body temperature during torpor, which is necessary to reach a very low metabolic rate. Conversely, large hibernators, such as the brown bear (Ursus arctos), show a moderate decrease in temperature during hibernation, thought to be related to the bear's large size. We studied body mass, abdominal body temperature, heart rate, and accelerometer-derived activity from 63 free-ranging brown bears (1-15 years old, 15-233 kg). We tested for relationships between body mass and body temperature, heart rate, and hibernation duration.RESULTS: The smallest individuals maintained lower body temperatures during hibernation, hibernated longer, and ended hibernation later than large bears. Unlike body temperature, winter heart rates were not associated with body mass. In summer, the opposite pattern was found, with smaller individuals having higher body temperature and daytime heart rates. Body mass was associated with body temperature in the winter hypometabolic state, even in a large hibernating mammal. Smaller bears, which are known to have higher thermal conductance, reached lower body temperatures during hibernation. During summer, smaller bears had higher body temperatures and daytime heart rates, a phenomenon not previously documented within a single mammalian species.CONCLUSION: We conclude that the smallest bears hibernated more deeply and longer than large bears, likely from a combined effect of basic thermodynamics, the higher need for energy savings, and a lower cost of warming up a smaller body.
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4.
  • Lewis, Christopher T. A., et al. (author)
  • Remodeling of skeletal muscle myosin metabolic states in hibernating mammals
  • 2024
  • In: eLIFE. - : eLife Sciences Publications Ltd. - 2050-084X. ; 13
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Hibernation is a period of metabolic suppression utilized by many small and large mammal species to survive during winter periods. As the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain incompletely understood, our study aimed to determine whether skeletal muscle myosin and its metabolic efficiency undergo alterations during hibernation to optimize energy utilization. We isolated muscle fibers from small hibernators, Ictidomys tridecemlineatus and Eliomys quercinus and larger hibernators, Ursus arctos and Ursus americanus. We then conducted loaded Mant-ATP chase experiments alongside X-ray diffraction to measure resting myosin dynamics and its ATP demand. In parallel, we performed multiple proteomics analyses. Our results showed a preservation of myosin structure in U. arctos and U. americanus during hibernation, whilst in I. tridecemlineatus and E. quercinus, changes in myosin metabolic states during torpor unexpectedly led to higher levels in energy expenditure of type II, fast-twitch muscle fibers at ambient lab temperatures (20 °C). Upon repeating loaded Mant-ATP chase experiments at 8 °C (near the body temperature of torpid animals), we found that myosin ATP consumption in type II muscle fibers was reduced by 77-107% during torpor compared to active periods. Additionally, we observed Myh2 hyper-phosphorylation during torpor in I. tridecemilineatus, which was predicted to stabilize the myosin molecule. This may act as a potential molecular mechanism mitigating myosin-associated increases in skeletal muscle energy expenditure during periods of torpor in response to cold exposure. Altogether, we demonstrate that resting myosin is altered in hibernating mammals, contributing to significant changes to the ATP consumption of skeletal muscle. Additionally, we observe that it is further altered in response to cold exposure and highlight myosin as a potentially contributor to skeletal muscle non-shivering thermogenesis.
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5.
  • Lewis, Christopher T. A., et al. (author)
  • Remodelling of skeletal muscle myosin metabolic states in hibernating mammals
  • 2023
  • Other publication (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Hibernation is a period of metabolic suppression utilized by many small and large mammal species to survive during winter periods. As the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain incompletely understood, our study aimed to determine whether skeletal muscle myosin and its metabolic efficiency undergo alterations during hibernation to optimize energy utilization. We isolated muscle fibers from small hibernators, Ictidomys tridecemlineatus and Eliomys quercinus and larger hibernators, Ursus arctos and Ursus americanus. We then conducted loaded Mant-ATP chase experiments alongside X-ray diffraction to measure resting myosin dynamics and its ATP demand. In parallel, we performed multiple proteomics analyses. Our results showed a preservation of myosin structure in U. arctos and U. americanus during hibernation, whilst in I. tridecemlineatus and E. quercinus, changes in myosin metabolic states during torpor unexpectedly led to higher levels in energy expenditure of type II, fast-twitch muscle fibers at ambient lab temperatures (20°C). Upon repeating loaded Mant-ATP chase experiments at 8°C (near the body temperature of torpid animals), we found that myosin ATP consumption in type II muscle fibers was reduced by 77-107% during torpor compared to active periods. Additionally, we observed Myh2 hyper-phosphorylation during torpor in I. tridecemilineatus, which was predicted to stabilize the myosin molecule. This may act as a potential molecular mechanism mitigating myosin-associated increases in skeletal muscle energy expenditure during periods of torpor in response to cold exposure. Altogether, we demonstrate that resting myosin is altered in hibernating mammals, contributing to significant changes to the ATP consumption of skeletal muscle. Additionally, we observe that it is further altered in response to cold exposure and highlight myosin as a potentially contributor to skeletal muscle non-shivering thermogenesis.
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6.
  • Nord, Andreas, et al. (author)
  • Lifelong Effects of Thermal Challenges During Development in Birds and Mammals
  • 2020
  • In: Frontiers in Physiology. - : Frontiers Media SA. - 1664-042X. ; 11
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Before they develop competent endothermy, mammals and birds are sensitive to fluctuating temperature. It follows that early life thermal environment can trigger changes to the ontogeny of thermoregulatory control. At the ecological level, we have incomplete knowledge of how such responses affect temperature tolerance later in life. In some cases, changes to pre- and postnatal temperature prime an organism’s capacity to meet a corresponding thermal environment in adulthood. However, in other cases, developmental temperature seems to constrain temperature tolerance later in life. The timing, duration, and severity of a thermal challenge will determine whether its impact is ameliorating or constraining. However, the effects influencing the transition between these states remain poorly understood, particularly in mammals and during the postnatal period. As climate change is predicted to bring more frequent spells of extreme temperature, it is relevant to ask under which circumstances developmental thermal conditions predispose or constrain animals’ capacity to deal with temperature variation. Increasingly stochastic weather also implies increasingly decoupled early- and late-life thermal environments. Hence, there is a pressing need to understand better how developmental temperature impacts thermoregulatory responses to matched and mismatched thermal challenges in subsequent life stages. Here, we summarize studies on how the thermal environment before, and shortly after, birth affects the ontogeny of thermoregulation in birds and mammals, and outline how this might carry over to temperature tolerance in adulthood. We also identify key points that need addressing to understand how effects of temperature variation during development may facilitate or constrain thermal adaptation over a lifetime.
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7.
  • Strandvik, Birgitta, et al. (author)
  • Elevated plasma phospholipid n-3 docosapentaenoic acid concentrations during hibernation
  • 2023
  • In: PLOS ONE. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS). - 1932-6203. ; 18:6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Factors for initiating hibernation are unknown, but the condition shares some metabolic similarities with consciousness/sleep, which has been associated with n-3 fatty acids in humans. We investigated plasma phospholipid fatty acid profiles during hibernation and summer in free-ranging brown bears (Ursus arctos) and in captive garden dormice (Eliomys quercinus) contrasting in their hibernation patterns. The dormice received three different dietary fatty acid concentrations of linoleic acid (LA) (19%, 36% and 53%), with correspondingly decreased alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) (32%, 17% and 1.4%). Saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids showed small differences between summer and hibernation in both species. The dormice diet influenced n-6 fatty acids and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) concentrations in plasma phospholipids. Consistent differences between summer and hibernation in bears and dormice were decreased ALA and EPA and marked increase of n-3 docosapentaenoic acid and a minor increase of docosahexaenoic acid in parallel with several hundred percent increase of the activity index of elongase ELOVL2 transforming C20-22 fatty acids. The highest LA supply was unexpectantly associated with the highest transformation of the n-3 fatty acids. Similar fatty acid patterns in two contrasting hibernating species indicates a link to the hibernation phenotype and requires further studies in relation to consciousness and metabolism.
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  • Result 1-7 of 7
Type of publication
journal article (5)
editorial collection (1)
other publication (1)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (6)
other academic/artistic (1)
Author/Editor
Giroud, Sylvain (7)
Fröbert, Ole, 1964- (5)
Ochala, Julien (2)
Nord, Andreas (2)
Qureshi, Abdul Rashi ... (2)
Arnemo, Jon (2)
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Stenvinkel, Peter (2)
Iwamoto, Hiroyuki (2)
Painer, Johanna (2)
Fedorov, Vadim B. (2)
Goropashnaya, Anna V (2)
Lewis, Christopher T ... (2)
Melhedegaard, Elise ... (2)
Ognjanovic, Marija M ... (2)
Olsen, Mathilde S. (2)
Laitila, Jenni (2)
Seaborne, Robert A. ... (2)
Hessel, Anthony L. (2)
Kuehn, Michel N. (2)
Merino, Carla (2)
Amigo, Nuria (2)
Staples, James F. (2)
Bergman, Peter (1)
Singh, Navinder (1)
Strandvik, Birgitta (1)
Blanc, Stepháne (1)
Evans, Alina L. (1)
Kindberg, Jonas (1)
Engvall, Martin (1)
Thiel, Alexandra (1)
Fuchs, Boris (1)
Zedrosser, Andreas (1)
Storey, Kenneth B. (1)
Nowack, Julia (1)
Ebert, Thomas (1)
Stalder, Gabrielle (1)
Kublickiene, Karolin ... (1)
Göritz, Frank (1)
Vetter, Sebastian (1)
Bieber, Claudia (1)
Redtenbacher, Irene (1)
Shiels, Paul G. (1)
Johnson, Richard J. (1)
Laske, Timothy G. (1)
Friebe, Andrea (1)
Swenson, Jon E. (1)
Backman-Johansson, C ... (1)
Gronset, Magnus (1)
Zhang, Changxin (1)
Barnes, Brian (1)
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University
Örebro University (5)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (3)
Lund University (2)
Karolinska Institutet (2)
Language
English (7)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (6)
Medical and Health Sciences (3)

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