Printer Friendly
The Free Library
6,683,380 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Sleeper finding: hormone key to hibernation?


A recently discovered hormone may play a major role in triggering and maintaining hibernation. The finding could shed light on this annual period of slumber, which largely remains a mystery even after decades of research.

Each year, species ranging from amphibians amphibians

members of the animal class Amphibia. Includes frogs, toads, newts, salamanders and cecilians all capable of living on land or in water.
 to rodents settle in for a long winter's nap, which helps them conserve energy and other resources dining harsh weather. Their body temperatures plummet to near freezing, and metabolisms slow.

Researchers are eager to understand hibernation because it seems to protect slumbering animals from a variety of ills, including hypothermia hypothermia

Abnormally low body temperature, with slowing of physiological activity. It is artificially induced (usually with ice baths) for certain surgical procedures and cancer treatments.
, strokes, muscle atrophy Muscle atrophy refers to a decrease in the size of skeletal muscle, which occurs in a variety of settings. Atrophy may or may not be distinct from "sarcopenia", which is the loss of muscle seen in the aged. , infections, and cancer--a defense that might someday some·day  
adv.
At an indefinite time in the future.

Usage Note: The adverbs someday and sometime express future time indefinitely: We'll succeed someday. Come sometime.
 be emulated in people.

But because hibernating animals' metabolisms drop so dramatically, it's difficult to detect what molecules might control the phenomenon, notes biologist Noriaki Kondo of Kanagawa Academy of Science and Technology in Tokyo.

Several years ago, Kondo and his colleagues identified a hormone that's abundant in Siberian chipmunks' blood during summer but fades away during the winter. Suspecting that the hormone's seasonal fluxes might be related to hibernation, the researchers decided to give it a closer look. The hormone is made of four proteins and is called hibernation-protein complex (HPc).

First, to make sure that HPc doesn't fluctuate simply because of body temperature or light, the researchers kept a group of chipmunks in cold and darkness year-round. Other chipmunks were kept warm throughout the year, with regular 24-hour cycles of daylight and darkness. Regardless of these conditions, HPc continued to fluctuate on a seasonal schedule.

Next, Kondo's team examined whether HPc makes its way to the brain, the presumed control site for hibernation. Though blood concentrations of the hormone were highest during the summer, the researchers couldn't find HPc in the fluid bathing the chipmunks' brains during that season. However, concentrations of the hormone rose in the brain fluid as hibernation began and remained steady during hibernation.

When the scientists injected in·ject·ed
adj.
1. Of or relating to a substance introduced into the body.

2. Of or relating to a blood vessel that is visibly distended with blood.



injected

1. introduced by injection.

2. congested.
 hibernating chipmunks' brains with antibodies that blocked the hormone's action, some of the animals cut short their hibernations. This result suggests that HPc keeps hibernation going, the researchers report in the April 7 Cell.

The study is "a nice first step" toward understanding hibernation's molecular mechanism, says Sandy Martin of the University of Colorado University of Colorado may refer to:
  • University of Colorado at Boulder (flagship campus)
  • University of Colorado at Colorado Springs
  • University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center
  • University of Colorado system
 School of Medicine in Aurora Aurora, cities, United States
Aurora (ərôr`ə, ô–).

1 City (1990 pop. 222,103), Adams and Arapahoe counties, N central Colo., a growing suburb on the east side of Denver; inc. 1903.
. However, she warns, "more work needs to be done before anyone writes this into the textbooks:" Martin notes that no study has found HPc in other hibernating animals. She adds that even in Siberian chipmunks The Siberian Chipmunk is a member of the chipmunk genus, Tamias. Its habitat ranges across northern Asia from central Russia to China, Korea and northern Japan (Hokkaidō). It lives in woodland habitats with a bushy understory. , it's unclear what HPc might do in the body to trigger and maintain hibernation.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Brownlee, C.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 15, 2006
Words:422
Previous Article:Limited storage: lack of nutrients will constrain carbon uptake.(This Week)
Next Article:Dynamic duo: two catalysts build valuable carbon chains.(This Week)
Topics:



Related Articles
Highs and woes of runners' hormones.
Randy reptiles: curious clockwork spurs sex drive in snakes. (mating behavior of the red-sided garter snake)
Feel like hibernating? Blame the brain. (hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus regulates hibernation)(Brief Article)
Chilled brains: hibernating animals may hold clues to novel stroke treatments.(Cover Story)
Does lack of sleep lead to diabetes?(sleep deprivation may decrease insulin sensitivity)(Brief Article)
A first for mammals: tropical hibernating.(Zoology)
A new look at exercise for troubled sleep.(good sleep)
Foodfree growth.(rattlsnakes can hibernate for 2 years)(Brief article)
Perchance to hibernate: can we tap a dormant capacity to downshift our metabolism?

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles