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The relationship between hypoxia exposure and circulating cortisol levels in social and solitary African mole-rats: An initial report.
- Source :
-
General & Comparative Endocrinology . Aug2023, Vol. 339, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p. - Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- • Hypoxia exposure leads to varied plasma cortisol levels in solitary and social mole-rats. • Social mole-rats exhibit lower basal plasma cortisol levels under normoxia than solitary mole-rats. • Solitary mole-rats show no significant increase in plasma cortisol levels in response to hypoxia. • Social mole-rats show a significant increase in plasma cortisol levels in response to hypoxia. Hypoxemia from exposure to intermittent and/or acute environmental hypoxia (lower oxygen concentration) is a severe stressor for many animal species. The response to hypoxia of the hypothalamic–pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA-axis), which culminates in the release of glucocorticoids, has been well-studied in hypoxia-intolerant surface-dwelling mammals. Several group-living (social) subterranean species, including most African mole-rats, are hypoxia-tolerant, likely due to regular exposure to intermittent hypoxia in their underground burrows. Conversely, solitary mole-rat species, lack many adaptive mechanisms, making them less hypoxia-tolerant than the social genera. To date, the release of glucocorticoids in response to hypoxia has not been measured in hypoxia-tolerant mammalian species. Consequently, this study exposed three social African mole-rat species and two solitary mole-rat species to normoxia, or acute hypoxia and then measured their respective plasma glucocorticoid (cortisol) concentrations. Social mole-rats had lower plasma cortisol concentrations under normoxia than the solitary genera. Furthermore, individuals of all three of the social mole-rat species exhibited significantly increased plasma cortisol concentrations after hypoxia, similar to those of hypoxia-intolerant surface-dwelling species. By contrast, individuals of the two solitary species had a reduced plasma cortisol response to acute hypoxia, possibly due to increased plasma cortisol under normoxia. If placed in perspective with other closely related surface-dwelling species, the regular exposure of the social African mole-rats to hypoxia may have reduced the basal levels of the components for the adaptive mechanisms associated with hypoxia exposure, including circulating cortisol levels. Similarly, the influence of body mass on plasma cortisol levels cannot be ignored. This study demonstrates that both hypoxia-tolerant rodents and hypoxia-intolerant terrestrial laboratory-bred rodents may possess similar HPA-axis responses from exposure to hypoxia. Further research is required to confirm the results from this pilot study and to further confirm how the cortisol concentrations may influence responses to hypoxia in African mole-rats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00166480
- Volume :
- 339
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- General & Comparative Endocrinology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 163996321
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ygcen.2023.114294