Wright Sarah, Fokidis H Bobby
Department of Biology, Rollins College, Winter Park, FL 37289, USA.
Department of Biology, Rollins College, Winter Park, FL 37289, USA.
Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2016 Sep 1;235:201-209. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2016.05.020. Epub 2016 May 30.
Perturbations in an organism's environment can induce significant shifts in hormone secretory patterns. In this context, the glucocorticoid (GC) steroids secreted by the adrenal cortex have received much attention from ecologists and behaviorists due to their role in the vertebrate stress response. Adrenal GCs, such as corticosterone (CORT), are highly responsive to instability in environmental and social conditions. However, little is understood about how adrenal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is influenced by changing conditions. We conducted field experiments to determine how circulating CORT and DHEA vary during restraint stress in the male northern cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis). Specifically, we examined how four different changes in the physical (urbanization and food availability) and social (territorial conflict, distress of a mate) environment affect CORT and DHEA levels. The majority of cardinals responded to restraint stress by increasing and decreasing CORT and DHEA, respectively, however this depended on sampling context. Cardinals sampled from urban habitats had both lower initial and restraint stress CORT concentrations, but a comparable DHEA pattern to those sampled from a forest. Supplementing food to territorial males did not alter circulating initial DHEA or CORT concentrations nor did it change the response to restraint stress when compared to unsupplemented controls. Exposing cardinals to varying durations of song playback, which mimics a territorial intrusion, did not affect CORT levels, but did attenuate the DHEA response to restraint stress. Examining a larger dataset of males captured before, after or at the same time as their female mate, allowed us to address how the stress of a captured mate affected the male's CORT and DHEA response. Males showed elevated initial and restraint CORT and DHEA when their female mate was captured first. Taken together, these data demonstrate that both CORT and DHEA secretion patterns depends on environmental, and particularly current social conditions.
生物体环境中的扰动可引发激素分泌模式的显著变化。在此背景下,肾上腺皮质分泌的糖皮质激素(GC)因其在脊椎动物应激反应中的作用而受到生态学家和行为学家的广泛关注。肾上腺GC,如皮质酮(CORT),对环境和社会条件的不稳定高度敏感。然而,关于肾上腺脱氢表雄酮(DHEA)如何受到变化条件的影响,人们了解甚少。我们进行了野外实验,以确定雄性北美主红雀(Cardinalis cardinalis)在束缚应激期间循环中的CORT和DHEA如何变化。具体而言,我们研究了物理环境(城市化和食物可获得性)和社会环境(领地冲突、配偶的痛苦)中的四种不同变化如何影响CORT和DHEA水平。大多数主红雀对束缚应激的反应分别是CORT增加和DHEA减少,然而这取决于采样背景。从城市栖息地采样获得的主红雀,其初始和束缚应激时的CORT浓度均较低,但DHEA模式与从森林中采样的主红雀相当。与未补充食物的对照组相比,给领地雄性补充食物既没有改变循环中的初始DHEA或CORT浓度,也没有改变对束缚应激的反应。让主红雀接触不同时长的模仿领地入侵的歌声回放,并未影响CORT水平,但确实减弱了DHEA对束缚应激的反应。检查一个更大的数据集,该数据集包含在其雌性配偶之前、之后或同时捕获的雄性,使我们能够研究捕获配偶的应激如何影响雄性的CORT和DHEA反应。当雄性的雌性配偶首先被捕获时,雄性的初始和束缚时的CORT及DHEA水平会升高。综上所述,这些数据表明CORT和DHEA的分泌模式均取决于环境,尤其是当前的社会条件。