Hartman Bakken Bradley, Herrera M L Gerardo, Carroll Robert M, Ayala-Berdón Jorge, Schondube Jorge E, Martínez Del Rio Carlos
Dept. of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison, 120 Russell Labs, 1630 Linden Dr., Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol. 2008 Dec;295(6):F1855-63. doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.90349.2008. Epub 2008 Oct 22.
To maintain water and electrolyte balance, nectar-feeding vertebrates oscillate between two extremes: avoiding overhydration when feeding and preventing dehydration during fasts. Several studies have examined how birds resolve this osmoregulatory dilemma, but no data are available for nectar-feeding mammals. In this article, we 1) estimated the ability of Pallas's long-tongued bats (Glossophaga soricina; Phyllostomidae) to dilute and concentrate urine and 2) examined how water intake affected the processes that these bats use to maintain water balance. Total urine osmolality in water- and salt-loaded bats ranged between 31 +/- 37 mosmol/kgH(2)O (n = 6) and 578 +/- 56 mosmol/kgH(2)O (n = 2), respectively. Fractional water absorption in the gastrointestinal tract was not affected by water intake rate. As a result, water flux, body water turnover, and renal water load all increased with increasing water intake. Despite these relationships, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was not responsive to water loading. To eliminate excess water, Pallas's long-tongued bats increased water excretion rate by reducing fractional renal water reabsorption. We also found that rates of total evaporative water loss increased with increasing water intake. During their natural daytime fast, mean GFR in Pallas's long-tongued bats was 0.37 ml/h (n = 10). This is approximately 90% lower than the GFR we measured in fed bats. Our findings 1) suggest that Pallas's long-tongued bats do not have an exceptional urine-diluting or -concentrating ability and 2) demonstrate that the bats eliminate excess ingested water by reducing renal water reabsorption and limit urinary water loss during fasting periods by reducing GFR.
为维持水和电解质平衡,以花蜜为食的脊椎动物在两个极端之间摆动:进食时避免水分摄入过多,禁食期间防止脱水。多项研究探讨了鸟类如何解决这种渗透调节难题,但尚无关于以花蜜为食的哺乳动物的相关数据。在本文中,我们:1)评估了长舌蝠(Glossophaga soricina;叶口蝠科)稀释和浓缩尿液的能力;2)研究了水分摄入如何影响这些蝙蝠维持水平衡的过程。摄入水和盐的蝙蝠的尿渗透压总量分别在31±37毫摩尔/千克水(n = 6)和578±56毫摩尔/千克水(n = 2)之间。胃肠道的水分吸收分数不受水分摄入速率的影响。因此,水通量、身体水分周转率和肾脏水负荷均随水分摄入量的增加而增加。尽管存在这些关系,但肾小球滤过率(GFR)对水负荷没有反应。为了排出多余的水分,长舌蝠通过降低肾脏水分重吸收分数来提高水分排泄率。我们还发现,总蒸发失水量随水分摄入量的增加而增加。在它们自然的白天禁食期间,长舌蝠的平均GFR为0.37毫升/小时(n = 10)。这比我们在喂食蝙蝠中测得的GFR低约90%。我们的研究结果:1)表明长舌蝠没有特殊的尿液稀释或浓缩能力;2)证明蝙蝠通过减少肾脏水分重吸收来排出摄入的多余水分,并在禁食期间通过降低GFR来限制尿液水分流失。