Laboratorio de Inmunorregulación, Departamento de Inmunología, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Ciudad de México, Mexico.
Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Ciudad de México, Mexico.
Dev Comp Immunol. 2022 Feb;127:104303. doi: 10.1016/j.dci.2021.104303. Epub 2021 Oct 30.
Bats are the only flying mammals known. They have longer lifespan than other mammals of similar size and weight and can resist high loads of many pathogens, mostly viruses, with no signs of disease. These distinctive characteristics have been attributed to their metabolic rate that is thought to be the result of their flying lifestyle. Compared with non-flying mammals, bats have lower production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and high levels of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase. This anti-oxidative vs. oxidative profile may help to explain bat's longer than expected lifespans. The aim of this study was to assess the effect that a significant reduction in flying has on bats leukocytes mitochondrial activity. This was assessed using samples of lymphoid and myeloid cells from peripheral blood from Artibeus jamaicensis bats shortly after capture and up to six weeks after flying deprivation. Mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψ), mitochondrial calcium (mCa), and mitochondrial ROS (mROS) were used as key indicators of mitochondrial activity, while total ROS and glucose uptake were used as additional indicators of cell metabolism. Results showed that total ROS and glucose uptake were statistically significantly lower at six weeks of flying deprivation (p < 0.05), in both lymphoid and myeloid cells, however no significant changes in mitochondrial activity associated with flying deprivation was observed (p > 0.05). These results suggest that bat mitochondria are stable to sudden changes in physical activity, at least up to six weeks of flying deprivation. However, decrease in total ROS and glucose uptake in myeloid cells after six weeks of captivity suggest a compensatory mechanism due to the lack of the highly metabolic demands associated with flying.
蝙蝠是唯一已知的会飞的哺乳动物。它们的寿命比其他体型和体重相似的哺乳动物长,并且可以抵抗许多病原体(主要是病毒)的高负荷,而没有患病的迹象。这些独特的特征归因于它们的代谢率,这被认为是它们飞行生活方式的结果。与非飞行哺乳动物相比,蝙蝠产生的活性氧(ROS)较少,而超氧化物歧化酶等抗氧化酶的水平较高。这种抗氧化与氧化的特征可能有助于解释蝙蝠比预期寿命更长的原因。本研究的目的是评估飞行能力显著降低对蝙蝠白细胞线粒体活性的影响。这是通过评估 Artibeus jamaicensis 蝙蝠外周血中淋巴样和髓样细胞样本在捕获后不久和飞行剥夺后长达 6 周时的线粒体膜电位(Δψ)、线粒体钙(mCa)和线粒体 ROS(mROS)来评估的。总 ROS 和葡萄糖摄取被用作细胞代谢的其他指标。结果表明,在飞行剥夺 6 周时,总 ROS 和葡萄糖摄取均显著降低(p<0.05),在淋巴样和髓样细胞中均如此,但与飞行剥夺相关的线粒体活性没有显著变化(p>0.05)。这些结果表明,蝙蝠的线粒体对身体活动的突然变化是稳定的,至少在飞行剥夺 6 周内是如此。然而,在 6 周的囚禁后,髓样细胞中总 ROS 和葡萄糖摄取的减少表明存在一种补偿机制,这是由于缺乏与飞行相关的高代谢需求所致。