4.6 Review

The Torpid State: Recent Advances in Metabolic Adaptations and Protective Mechanisms†

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.623665

关键词

body temperature; metabolic depression; hibernation; hormones; lipids; non-Holarctic heterotherms; antioxidant; H2S

资金

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P27267-B25, P31577-B25]
  2. NSERC Canada
  3. European Space Agency [4000123556]
  4. Fondecyt [1180917]
  5. ANID PIA/BASAL [FB0002]
  6. Instituto Milenio de Biologia Integrativa (iBio)
  7. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P31577] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This review discusses the importance of torpor and hibernation in enabling animals to survive periods of low resource availability, highlighting characteristics such as metabolic adaptations and protective mechanisms associated with these states. Different species utilize torpor strategies to reduce energy needs in varying ways, with adaptations and protective mechanisms showing variations, warranting comparisons between monotremes and marsupials for understanding the origin and evolution of mammalian torpor.
Torpor and hibernation are powerful strategies enabling animals to survive periods of low resource availability. The state of torpor results from an active and drastic reduction of an individual's metabolic rate (MR) associated with a relatively pronounced decrease in body temperature. To date, several forms of torpor have been described in all three mammalian subclasses, i.e., monotremes, marsupials, and placentals, as well as in a few avian orders. This review highlights some of the characteristics, from the whole organism down to cellular and molecular aspects, associated with the torpor phenotype. The first part of this review focuses on the specific metabolic adaptations of torpor, as it is used by many species from temperate zones. This notably includes the endocrine changes involved in fat- and food-storing hibernating species, explaining biomedical implications of MR depression. We further compare adaptive mechanisms occurring in opportunistic vs. seasonal heterotherms, such as tropical and sub-tropical species. Such comparisons bring new insights into the metabolic origins of hibernation among tropical species, including resistance mechanisms to oxidative stress. The second section of this review emphasizes the mechanisms enabling heterotherms to protect their key organs against potential threats, such as reactive oxygen species, associated with the torpid state. We notably address the mechanisms of cellular rehabilitation and protection during torpor and hibernation, with an emphasis on the brain, a central organ requiring protection during torpor and recovery. Also, a special focus is given to the role of an ubiquitous and readily-diffusing molecule, hydrogen sulfide (H2S), in protecting against ischemia-reperfusion damage in various organs over the torpor-arousal cycle and during the torpid state. We conclude that (i) the flexibility of torpor use as an adaptive strategy enables different heterothermic species to substantially suppress their energy needs during periods of severely reduced food availability, (ii) the torpor phenotype implies marked metabolic adaptations from the whole organism down to cellular and molecular levels, and (iii) the torpid state is associated with highly efficient rehabilitation and protective mechanisms ensuring the continuity of proper bodily functions. Comparison of mechanisms in monotremes and marsupials is warranted for understanding the origin and evolution of mammalian torpor.

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