Jessop Tim S, Lane Meagan, Wilson Robbie S, Narayan Edward J
1 Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia.
2 School of Biosciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2018 Jul/Aug;91(4):967-975. doi: 10.1086/698664.
Phenotypic plasticity, broadly defined as the capacity of one genotype to produce more than one phenotype, is a key mechanism for how animals adapt to environmental (including thermal) variation. Vertebrate glucocorticoid hormones exert broad-scale regulation of physiological, behavioral, and morphological traits that influence fitness under many life-history or environmental contexts. Yet the capacity for vertebrates to demonstrate different types of thermal plasticity, including rapid compensation or longer acclimation in glucocorticoid hormone function, when subject to different environmental temperature regimes remains poorly addressed. Here, we explore whether patterns of urinary corticosterone metabolites respond (i.e., evidence of acclimation) to repeated short-term and sustained long-term temperature exposures in an amphibian, the cane toad (Rhinella marina). In response to three repeated short (30-min) high-temperature (37°C) exposures (at 10-d intervals), toads produced urinary corticosterone metabolite responses of sequentially greater magnitude, relative to controls. However, toads subjected to 4 wk of acclimation to either cool (18°C)- or warm (30°C)-temperature environments did not differ significantly in their urinary corticosterone metabolite responses during exposure to a thermal ramp (18°-36°C). Together, these results indicate that adult toads had different, including limited, capacities for their glucocorticoid responses to demonstrate plasticity to different regimes of environmental temperature variation. We advocate further research as necessary to identify plasticity, or lack thereof, in glucocorticoid physiology, to better understand how vertebrates can regulate organismal responses to environmental variation.
表型可塑性被广泛定义为一种基因型产生不止一种表型的能力,是动物适应环境(包括温度)变化的关键机制。脊椎动物的糖皮质激素对生理、行为和形态特征具有广泛的调节作用,这些特征在许多生活史或环境背景下都会影响适应性。然而,当脊椎动物处于不同的环境温度条件下时,它们表现出不同类型的热可塑性的能力,包括糖皮质激素功能的快速补偿或更长时间的适应,这一点仍未得到充分研究。在这里,我们探讨了两栖动物蔗蟾(Rhinella marina)的尿皮质酮代谢物模式是否会对重复的短期和持续长期温度暴露产生反应(即适应的证据)。在经历三次重复的短时间(30分钟)高温(37°C)暴露(间隔10天)后,相对于对照组,蔗蟾产生的尿皮质酮代谢物反应幅度依次增大。然而,在适应了4周凉爽(18°C)或温暖(30°C)温度环境的蔗蟾中,在暴露于温度梯度(18°-36°C)期间,它们的尿皮质酮代谢物反应没有显著差异。总之,这些结果表明成年蔗蟾对糖皮质激素的反应具有不同的,包括有限的能力,以表现出对不同环境温度变化模式的可塑性。我们主张在必要时进行进一步研究,以确定糖皮质激素生理学中的可塑性或缺乏可塑性的情况,以便更好地理解脊椎动物如何调节对环境变化的机体反应。