Contact: Chris Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
February 2: It’s Not Just for Groundhogs,
Anymore
BETHESDA, Md (Jan 26, 2007) – Groundhogs and other
hibernators take a very sensible approach to winter: They slip into a state
of suspended animation and let the worst of the cold weather pass.
The cold prompts profound physiological changes in
these animals, causing their normally fast metabolism to come almost to a
stop during winter. With metabolism slowed to a crawl, the animal draws on
its fat stores sparingly to make it through the winter.
Hibernation has become the focus of interesting
physiological research. A hibernating squirrel’s heart may fall from 300
beats per minute to just three per minute. Its oxygen consumption can drop
to just 2% of normal. Its core body temperature can drop from 37° C (98.6°
F) to about 2° C (35.6°F).
The hibernating animal may be a frog frozen in a winter
pond, a turtle buried in the mud of a swamp, a bear in its den or a squirrel
curled in a tight ball in its underground burrow. There is even a primate,
the lemur, which hibernates in tree trunks. The range of hibernating species
suggests that many animals, including humans, possess the genes necessary to
hibernate.
Experts available for
Groundhog Day
The American Physiological Society has a variety
of experts who can talk about all aspects of hibernation research and the
implications it has for medical advances, including for victims of stroke,
hemorrhagic bleeding and hypothermia. The research may also lead to better
ways to preserve organs for transplant and to help control obesity.
For example, when a person suffers a stroke, heart
attack or severe hypothermia, it is not the loss of blood flow (ischemia)
that causes the greatest damage to the organs and tissues. Instead, the
greatest damage occurs when the blood flow is restored (reperfusion).
Hibernating animals have significantly reduced blood flow when they
hibernate, but reperfuse without injury when emerging from hibernation. If
physiologists can figure out the mechanisms that allow ischemia and
reperfusion without injury, it might help the victims of these conditions.
Among the experts the APS has available to talk about
the physiology of hibernation are:
-
Matthew T. Andrews, a professor at the University
of Minnesota in Duluth tells school children that they can find out what
a hibernating squirrel feels like by putting a tennis ball in the
refrigerator overnight. The next morning, the cool, fuzzy ball, feels
much like the hibernating squirrel. Andrews is looking for the genes
responsible for inducing and maintaining hibernation in mammals. In
particular, his laboratory is identifying the genes responsible for
regulating the physiology in the heart of the hibernating 13-lined
ground squirrel.
-
Hannah V. Carey, a professor at the University of
Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine in Madison, has found that
ground squirrels that suffered a loss of 60% of their blood volume
survive much longer compared to other rodents and other non-hibernating
ground squirrels. The ground squirrel’s liver and heart remain viable
outside the body for much longer during the hibernation season. These
findings could one day extend the time that organs for transplant can be
preserved and give doctors time to find a suitable recipient.
-
Gregory L. Florant, a professor at Colorado State
University in Fort Collins, studies changes in metabolism during
hibernation and investigates how this relates to the regulation of food
intake and obesity. He studies the role that insulin and leptin play in
the regulation of energy balance and examines the role nutrients play in
regulating food intake.
Warm
winter could be a problem
The warm winter that has settled over parts of the
globe this year could mean hibernating animals wake up sooner, possibly
before there’s an adequate supply of food. In the Midwest, for example,
warmer temperatures are expected to raise the metabolic rate of the 13-lined
ground squirrel, a hibernator which burrows underground. A higher metabolic
rate demands more energy, causing the squirrels to use fat stores more
quickly. This may cause them to emerge from hibernation sooner to seek food
-- perhaps before food is available.
Leptin, which plays an important part in the cessation
of food intake during hibernation, decreases with warmer temperatures during
hibernation. Decreased levels of leptin stimulate food intake. Research has
found that ground squirrels exposed to normal winter cold have high fat
depots, higher leptin concentrations and do not feed.
The warmer winter will not affect hibernators
everywhere. Golden-mantled ground squirrels in the Rocky Mountains, where
the temperatures are still cold, aren’t expected to have a problem. But in
past dry winters, the lack of snow pack resulted in the ground freezing
farther down, killing some of the hibernating squirrels.
* * *
The American Physiological Society was founded in 1887 to
foster basic and applied research. The Society, which has 10,500 members,
provides a wide range of research, education and career support and
publishes 11 peer-reviewed journals containing 4,000 studies annually.