Angelier Frédéric, Moe Børge, Blanc Samuel, Chastel Olivier
Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, F-79360 Villiers en Bois, Deux-Sèvres, France.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2009 Sep-Oct;82(5):590-602. doi: 10.1086/603634.
Life-history theory predicts that individuals should adapt their parental investment to the costs and benefits of the current reproductive effort. This could be achieved by modulating the hormonal stress response, which may shift energy investment away from reproduction and redirect it toward survival. In birds, this stress response consists of a release of corticosterone that may be accompanied by a decrease in circulating prolactin, a hormone involved in the regulation of parental care. We lack data on the modulation of the prolactin stress response. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that individuals should modulate their prolactin stress response according to the fitness value of the current reproductive effort relative to the fitness value of future reproduction. Specifically, we examined the influence of breeding status (failed breeders vs. incubating birds) and body condition on prolactin and corticosterone stress responses in a long-lived species, the snow petrel Pagodroma nivea. When facing stressors, incubating birds had higher prolactin levels than failed breeders. However, we found no effect of body condition on the prolactin stress response. The corticosterone stress response was modulated according to body condition but was not affected by breeding status. We also performed an experiment using injections of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and found that the modulation of the corticosterone stress response was probably associated with a reduction in ACTH release by the pituitary and a decrease in adrenal sensitivity to ACTH. In addition, we examined whether prolactin and corticosterone secretion were functionally linked. We found that these two hormonal stress responses were not correlated. Moreover, injection of ACTH did not affect prolactin levels, demonstrating that short-term variations in prolactin levels are not governed directly or indirectly by ACTH release. Thus, we suggest that the corticosterone and prolactin responses to short-term stressors are independent and may therefore mediate some specific components of parental investment in breeding birds. With mounting evidence, we suggest that examining both corticosterone and prolactin stress responses could be relevant to parental investment in vertebrates.
生活史理论预测,个体应根据当前繁殖努力的成本和收益来调整其亲代投资。这可以通过调节激素应激反应来实现,该反应可能会将能量投资从繁殖转移并重新导向生存。在鸟类中,这种应激反应包括皮质酮的释放,可能伴随着循环催乳素的减少,催乳素是一种参与亲代抚育调节的激素。我们缺乏关于催乳素应激反应调节的数据。在本研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设,即个体应根据当前繁殖努力的适合度值相对于未来繁殖适合度值来调节其催乳素应激反应。具体而言,我们研究了繁殖状态(繁殖失败的个体与正在孵卵的鸟类)和身体状况对一种长寿物种南极海燕(Pagodroma nivea)催乳素和皮质酮应激反应的影响。面对应激源时,正在孵卵的鸟类的催乳素水平高于繁殖失败的个体。然而,我们发现身体状况对催乳素应激反应没有影响。皮质酮应激反应根据身体状况进行调节,但不受繁殖状态的影响。我们还进行了一项使用促肾上腺皮质激素(ACTH)注射的实验,发现皮质酮应激反应的调节可能与垂体ACTH释放的减少以及肾上腺对ACTH敏感性的降低有关。此外,我们研究了催乳素和皮质酮分泌是否在功能上相关联。我们发现这两种激素应激反应不相关。此外,ACTH注射并未影响催乳素水平,这表明催乳素水平的短期变化不受ACTH释放的直接或间接控制。因此,我们认为皮质酮和催乳素对短期应激源的反应是独立的,因此可能介导了育雏鸟类亲代投资的一些特定组成部分。有越来越多的证据表明,研究皮质酮和催乳素应激反应可能与脊椎动物的亲代投资有关。