Sapolsky Robert M, Share Lisa J
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Institute of Primate Research, National Museums of Kenya, Karen, Nairobi.
Am J Primatol. 1994;32(4):261-275. doi: 10.1002/ajp.1350320404.
In a population of wild baboons living in East Africa, we have observed endocrine differences among individuals as a function of dominance rank. Among these differences, we previously observed indirect evidence for dominant males being more. responsive to sympathetic catecholamines than were subordinate males. The present report tests this explicitly. Male baboons of known rank were anesthetized, and sympathetic and parasympathetic activity was pharmacologically inhibited. In experiment I, males were challenged with epinephrine; over a wide dose range, dominant males had the largest and fastest rises in systolic pressure, the greatest peak systolic pressure, and the most rapid recovery from the epinephrine challenge. Similar rank-related differences in heart rate response to epinephrine also occurred. Experiment II showed that this phenomenon probably reflects rank-related differences at both the heart and vasculature. As evidence, the same rank differences in systolic blood pressure responsiveness occurred when males were challenged with the alpha receptor agonist phenylephrine (which predominantly constricts systemic veins and arterioles), while the same rank differences in heart rate responses occurred following stimulation with the beta receptor agonist isoproterenol (which selectively works at the heart). These data were obtained from animals stressed by anesthetization, known to cause considerable glucocorticoid secretion in this population. Such steroids are well known for their capacity to augment catecholamine action. In experiment III, we blocked endogenous glucocorticoid secretion with the steroidogenesis inhibitor metyrapone, and repeated the epinephrine challenge. Under these conditions, the rank differences in epinephrine responsiveness were eliminated. Thus, dominant males are not so much preferentially sensitive to catecholamine action, as much as to the potentiating effects of glucocorticoids upon such action. In agreement, we have observed previously that dominant males are also more sensitive to glucocorticoid negative feedback regulation. © Wiley-Liss, Inc.
在生活于东非的野生狒狒群体中,我们观察到个体之间存在内分泌差异,且这种差异与优势等级有关。在这些差异中,我们之前观察到有间接证据表明,优势雄性比从属雄性对交感儿茶酚胺更敏感。本报告对此进行了明确验证。对已知等级的雄性狒狒进行麻醉,并通过药理学方法抑制交感和副交感神经活动。在实验I中,给雄性狒狒注射肾上腺素;在很宽的剂量范围内,优势雄性的收缩压上升幅度最大、速度最快,收缩压峰值最高,且从肾上腺素刺激中恢复得最快。对肾上腺素的心率反应也出现了类似的与等级相关的差异。实验II表明,这种现象可能反映了心脏和血管系统中与等级相关的差异。作为证据,当用α受体激动剂去氧肾上腺素(主要使体静脉和小动脉收缩)刺激雄性狒狒时,收缩压反应出现了相同的等级差异,而在用β受体激动剂异丙肾上腺素(选择性作用于心脏)刺激后,心率反应出现了相同的等级差异。这些数据是从因麻醉而应激的动物身上获得的,已知麻醉会在该群体中导致大量糖皮质激素分泌。这类类固醇以增强儿茶酚胺作用的能力而闻名。在实验III中,我们用类固醇生成抑制剂甲吡酮阻断内源性糖皮质激素分泌,并重复肾上腺素刺激实验。在这些条件下,肾上腺素反应性的等级差异消失了。因此,优势雄性并非对儿茶酚胺作用有更大的优先敏感性,而是对糖皮质激素对这种作用的增强效应更敏感。与此一致的是,我们之前观察到优势雄性对糖皮质激素负反馈调节也更敏感。©威利 - 利斯公司。