Francis Clinton D, Donald Jeremy W, Fuxjager Matthew J, Goymann Wolfgang, Hau Michaela, Husak Jerry F, Johnson Michele A, Kircher Bonnie K, Knapp Rosemary, Martin Lynn B, Miller Eliot T, Schoenle Laura A, Vitousek Maren N, Williams Tony D, Downs Cynthia J
Department of Biological Sciences, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407, USA.
Coates Library, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2018 Oct 1;58(4):729-738. doi: 10.1093/icb/icy063.
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are stress hormones that can strongly influence physiology, behavior, and an organism's ability to cope with environmental change. Despite their importance, and the wealth of studies that have sought to understand how and why GC concentrations vary within species, we do not have a clear understanding of how circulating GC levels vary within and across the major vertebrate clades. New research has proposed that much interspecific variation in GC concentrations can be explained by variation in metabolism and body mass. Specifically, GC concentrations should vary proportionally with mass-specific metabolic rates and, given known scaling relationships between body mass and metabolic rate, GC concentrations should scale to the -1/4 power of body mass and to the power of 1 with mass-specific metabolic rate. Here, we use HormoneBase, the newly compiled database that includes plasma GC concentrations from free-living and unmanipulated vertebrates, to evaluate this hypothesis. Specifically, we explored the relationships between body mass or mass-specific metabolic rate and either baseline or stress-induced GC (cortisol or corticosterone) concentrations in tetrapods. Our phylogenetically-informed models suggest that, whereas the relationship between GC concentrations and body mass across tetrapods and among mammals is close to -1/4 power, this relationship does not exist in amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Moreover, with the exception of a positive association between stress-induced GC concentrations and mass-specific metabolic rate in birds, we found little evidence that GC concentrations are linked to metabolic rate, although the number of species sampled was quite limited for amphibians and somewhat so for reptiles and mammals. Nevertheless, these results stand in contrast to the generally accepted association between the two and suggest that our observed positive association between body mass and GC concentrations may not be due to the well-established link between mass and metabolism. Large-scale comparative approaches can come with drawbacks, such as pooling and pairing observations from separate sources. However, these broad analyses provide an important counterbalance to the majority of studies examining variation in GC concentrations at the population or species level, and can be a powerful approach to testing both long-standing and new questions in biology.
糖皮质激素(GCs)是应激激素,能强烈影响生理、行为以及生物体应对环境变化的能力。尽管它们很重要,且有大量研究试图了解物种内GC浓度如何以及为何会变化,但我们并不清楚主要脊椎动物类群内部和之间循环GC水平是如何变化的。新的研究提出,GC浓度的许多种间差异可以用代谢和体重的差异来解释。具体而言,GC浓度应与特定质量代谢率成比例变化,并且鉴于体重与代谢率之间已知的比例关系,GC浓度应与体重的-1/4次方以及与特定质量代谢率的1次方成比例。在这里,我们使用新编制的HormoneBase数据库,其中包括来自自由生活且未受操控的脊椎动物的血浆GC浓度,来评估这一假设。具体来说,我们探讨了体重或特定质量代谢率与四足动物基线或应激诱导的GC(皮质醇或皮质酮)浓度之间的关系。我们基于系统发育的模型表明,虽然四足动物以及哺乳动物中GC浓度与体重之间呈接近-1/4次方的关系,但这种关系在两栖动物、爬行动物和鸟类中并不存在。此外,除了鸟类中应激诱导的GC浓度与特定质量代谢率呈正相关外,我们几乎没有发现证据表明GC浓度与代谢率有关,尽管两栖动物采样的物种数量相当有限,爬行动物和哺乳动物的采样数量也有所限制。然而,这些结果与两者之间普遍接受的关联形成了对比,表明我们观察到的体重与GC浓度之间的正相关可能并非由于体重与代谢之间已确立的联系。大规模比较方法可能存在缺点,例如将来自不同来源的观察结果合并和配对。然而,这些广泛的分析为大多数在种群或物种水平研究GC浓度变化的研究提供了重要的平衡,并且可以成为测试生物学中长期存在的问题和新问题的有力方法。