López-Castañón Nerea, Casquero Silvia, Villanueva-Santos Virginia, Pérez-Rodríguez Lorenzo, Romero-Haro Ana Ángela
Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (IREC), CSIC-UCLM-JCCM, Ciudad Real, Spain.
Department of Evolutionary Ecology, National Museum of Natural Sciences (MNCN-CSIC), Madrid, Spain.
J Exp Zool A Ecol Integr Physiol. 2025 Aug;343(7):771-783. doi: 10.1002/jez.2930. Epub 2025 May 20.
A proper body condition determines the correct functioning of physiological processes and the optimal expression of fitness-related traits. Among these processes, maintaining the redox balance is essential to protect the organism from damage caused by oxidative stress. Yet, the causal link between an impaired body condition and a consequent increase in oxidative stress remains surprisingly far from clear. We experimentally tested such link by imposing a dietary restriction (DR), that is, decreased food availability, to nonreproductive adult red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa) and measuring a battery of oxidative stress biomarkers. Levels of oxidative status (ratio of reduced to oxidized glutathione [GSH:GSSG] in erythrocytes), oxidative damage in plasma lipids (MDA), and plasma antioxidant capacity (OXY and TEAC assays) were quantified before the DR, twice during the DR, and once after the end of the DR. The GSH:GSSG ratio remained steady throughout the experiment. By contrast, after 19 days under DR, individuals showed an increase in MDA levels and an altered antioxidant capacity (a reduction in OXY and an increase in TEAC) with respect to controls, showing that the worsening of body condition indeed leads to an increase of the oxidative stress. However, these effects were transitory, appearing only by 19 days under DR and disappearing afterwards. These findings suggest that, despite the temporary increase in oxidative damage, individuals adapt their oxidative physiology to overcome resource restriction, possibly by reallocating resources from other physiological processes. This highlights the importance of considering dynamic changes when evaluating the impact of stressful conditions.
适当的身体状况决定了生理过程的正常运作以及与健康相关特征的最佳表现。在这些过程中,维持氧化还原平衡对于保护生物体免受氧化应激造成的损害至关重要。然而,身体状况受损与随之而来的氧化应激增加之间的因果关系仍然令人惊讶地不清楚。我们通过对非繁殖期成年红腿鹧鸪(Alectoris rufa)实施饮食限制(DR),即减少食物供应,并测量一系列氧化应激生物标志物,对这种联系进行了实验测试。在饮食限制之前、饮食限制期间两次以及饮食限制结束后一次,对氧化状态水平(红细胞中还原型谷胱甘肽与氧化型谷胱甘肽的比率[GSH:GSSG])、血浆脂质中的氧化损伤(MDA)以及血浆抗氧化能力(OXY和TEAC测定)进行了量化。在整个实验过程中,GSH:GSSG比率保持稳定。相比之下,在饮食限制19天后,与对照组相比,个体的MDA水平增加,抗氧化能力改变(OXY降低,TEAC增加),表明身体状况的恶化确实导致氧化应激增加。然而,这些影响是暂时的,仅在饮食限制19天时出现,之后消失。这些发现表明,尽管氧化损伤暂时增加,但个体通过从其他生理过程重新分配资源,调整其氧化生理以克服资源限制。这突出了在评估应激条件的影响时考虑动态变化的重要性。