MAMMALS ON ICE : HIBERNATORS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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MAMMALS ON ICE : HIBERNATORS

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Myotis lucifugus, little brown bat. Spermophilus tridecemlineatus, 13-lined ground squirrel ... Families of protein kinases: PKA (cAMP), PKG (cGMP), CaM (Ca2 ) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MAMMALS ON ICE : HIBERNATORS


1
MAMMALS ON ICE HIBERNATORS
www.carleton.ca/kbstorey
2
Model Hibernators
Spermophilus richardsonii, Richardsons ground
squirrel
Spermophilus tridecemlineatus, 13-lined ground
squirrel
Myotis lucifugus, little brown bat
3
  • Seasonal phenomenon
  • Pre-hibernation hyperphagia
  • Gain up to 40 of body mass
  • Need polyunsaturated fats
  • Find hibernaculum dark, near 0C

4
What happens?
  • drop in body temperature
  • reduced heart rate
  • apnoic breathing
  • some muscle atrophy
  • periods of torpor lasting weeks
  • non-REM sleep
  • oleamide increases in brain
  • suppression of carbohydrate oxidation
  • RQ of 0.7 lipid oxidation

MR falls to fraction of normal
Stewart JM, Boudreau NM, Blakely JA Storey KB.
2002. J. Thermal Biol. 27, 309-315.
5
  • Metabolism inhibited causing Tb to fall
  • Metabolic rate falls to lt5 of normal
  • Smaller animals cool down faster
  • Q10 values up to 15
  • Reversible in arousal
  • Torpor bout duration 4 days to 2 weeks

6
METABOLIC RATE DEPRESSION
7
GENES
Control by transcriptional regulation
Transcription
RNAs
Control by translational regulation
Translation
Control by proteases
No Modification
PROTEINS (ENZYMES)
INACTIVE ENZYME
Degradation
Covalent modification
Control by post- translational modification
FUNCTIONAL ENZYMES
Inhibition and Activation
Control at level of enzyme function
ACTIVE ENZYMES
8
METABOLISM IN HIBERNATION
  • mRNA synthesis
  • Protein synthesis
  • Ion Pumping
  • Fuel use (esp. CHO)
  • O2 consumed

ATP turnover to lt5 of normal
9
PRINCIPLES OF HIBERNATION
  • 1. Metabolic rate reduction
  • 2. Control by protein kinases(SAPKs, 2nd
    messenger PKs)
  • 3. Selective gene activation

10
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11
i e Factors
Nucleus
mRNAs
GENES ON/OFF
CHO
PROTEINS
Trans.F
Na
ATP
K
PATHWAYS
AA
SAPK
P
PROT
?
SMW
FAT
ADP
ATP
KINASES (2nd)
MITO
ETC
12
HIBERNATION INDUCED CHANGES
  • Protein Synthesis slows to 1
  • Pumps Channels closed
  • Energy Production slows to 5
  • Energy Utilization slows to 2
  • Few SAP kinases activated
  • Gene inactivation ( mRNA )
  • Few Genes activated (1-2)

13
PROTEIN KINASES
  • Covalent modification by phosphorylation
  • Families of protein kinases PKA (cAMP), PKG
    (cGMP), CaM (Ca2), PKC (Ca2, PL,DG)
  • SAPKs daisy chain phosphorylations
  • Regulation is via interconversion of active
    vs subactive forms of protein substrates

14
Reversiblephosphorylation control of enzymes
P deP enzymesseparate on ionexchange columns
15
PATHWAY CONTROL IN HIBERNATION
Phospho / de-Phospho
  • Glycolysis (GP, GS, PFK, PK)
  • Fat synthesis (ATP-CL, ACC)
  • CHO fuel use (PDH)
  • Translation (eIF2a, eEF2)
  • Ion pumps (NaK-ATPase, Ca-ATPase)

16
  • Novel PhosphoEnzymes
  • BioInformatics Phospho-analyses
  • 2. 32P-ATP labeling studies
  • 3. Purification / Properties
  • 4. Structure / Function
  • 5. Phospho-sites

17
HIBERNATION INDUCED CHANGES
  • Protein Synthesis slows to 1
  • Pumps channels closed
  • Energy Production slows to 5
  • Energy Utilization slows to 2
  • Few SAP kinases activated
  • Gene inactivation ( mRNA )
  • Few Genes activated (1-2)

18
TURNING OFF GENESRole of Epigenetics
Epigenetics - Stable changes in gene
activity that do not involve changes in DNA
sequence Common mechanisms - DNA
methylation - Histone modification / histone
variants e.g. acetylation,
phosphorylation - Regulatory non-coding RNAs
19
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20
Transcription Suppression in Hibernator Muscle
  • Phospho-Histone H3 (Ser10) levels reduced
  • Acetyl-Histone H3 (Lys23) levels reduced
    Both inhibit Transcription
  • Histone Deacetylase activity increased 80
  • HDAC 1 4 protein levels increased
  • RNA Polymerase II activity Decreased

21
Regulatory non-coding RNAs
microRNA the New Frontier
  • Small RNAs 22 nucleotides in length
  • Highly conserved across species
  • Bind to 3 UTR of mRNAs
  • Act to
  • - Block translation of mRNA - Target
    mRNA for degradation

22
Are miRNAs differentially regulated in
hibernators?
  • Yes! Selected miRNAs were regulated in heart,
    muscle and kidney of hibernating 13-lined ground
    squirrels (Morin, Dubuc Storey, 2008, Biochim
    Biophys Acta 1779628-633)

23
METABOLIC RATE DEPRESSION
24
HIBERNATION INDUCED CHANGES
  • Protein Synthesis slows to 1
  • Pumps channels closed
  • Energy Production slows to 5
  • Energy Utilization slows to 2
  • Few SAP kinases activated
  • Gene inactivation ( mRNA )
  • Few Genes activated (1-2)

25
ROLE OF TRANSCRIPTION
  • Global rate of mRNA synthesis depressed.
    Method nuclear run-on
  • Are selected genes up-regulated ?
  • TO ASSESS GENE UPREGULATION
  • What new mRNAs are created - cDNA
    library, Gene Chip

26
cDNA ARRAY SCREENING
27
  • cDNA Arrays- Methods
  • Materials
  • Sources- Publications

28
GENE CHANGES IN HIBERNATION
29
CONTROL REGION OF A TYPICAL EUKARYOTIC GENE
30
Nrf2/ARE pathway
31
NRF-2
  • Increased NFR-2 protein
  • Increased NFR-2 in the Nucleus
  • Increased levels of co-Tf MafG
  • Downstream gene activation
  • GST, HO-1, HO-2, Peroxiredoxin
  • Thioredoxin, SOD (Cu/Zn Mn)

32
Nrf2/ARE pathway
Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS)
Actin
Keap1
Dissociation
Nrf2
Cytoplasm
Nucleus
Activation
33
Protein Regulation of Nrf2
100 kDa 57 kDa
34
Nrf2 distribution between nuclearand cytoplasmic
fractions
Moved to nucleus
35
Nrf2 Timecourse in Heart
  • Nrf2 protein in early and late hibernation
  • ? Up-regulation cascade.

36
Peroxiredoxins
  • Detoxify / reduce hydroperoxides
  • Expressed at high levels
  • ARE in promoter region of Prdx
    genes
  • Nrf2 activated


37
Peroxiredoxin Activity
  • Protein level correlates with increased activity
  • Assays in BAT and heart with thioredoxin,
    thioredoxin reductase and NADPH

Kim et al., 2005
38
Conclusions
  • Activation of the Nrf2 pathway
  • Activated in early-late torpor, along with
    downstream gene protein products
  • Increased PRDX, HO TRX protein and activity
  • Result
  • ? Detoxification of H2O2, intracellular
    signaling control

39
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40
TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS
  • ATF (Glucose Regulated Proteins)
  • HIF (O2), HSF (Hsp)
  • NFkB (IkB-P), Nrf-2 (), NRF-1
  • PPAR, PGC, RXR, chREBP, CREB-P
  • STAT, SMAD, p53-P, HNF, AP (1,2)
  • Methods EMSA, CHiP

41
ENDURANCE EXERCISE
VS
HIBERNATION
42
RESCULPTING MUSCLE IN HIBERNATION vs ATROPHY
  • Torpor inactivity for up to 8-9 mo
  • Brief arousals, no exercise
  • Muscles retain full function in spring
  • Muscle loss / wasting minimal

43
ATROPHY vs HIBERNATION DIFFERENCES
  • GRP HSP chaperones
  • Glycolysis
  • Fat Metabolism genes
  • Antioxidant genes
  • Proteolysis complex UB
  • Serpins Apoptosis inhibitors
  • Myosin protein synthesis

44
ATROPHY HIBERNATIONSIMILARITIES
  • Protein synthesis


45
EXERCISE HIBERNATIONSIMILARITIES
  • Oxidative stress markers
  • NFkB (Tf) , IkB-P
  • Nrf-2 (Tf) Antioxidant enzymes
  • STAT (Tf)
  • HIF (Tf)
  • Ferritin, Transferrin receptor
  • common to atrophy, hibr. exercise

46
EXERCISE HIBERNATION SIMILARITIES -2
  • Myosin change Heavy Light chains
  • Antioxidant enzymes mRNA protein
  • Fat oxidation (CPT1)
  • Mitochondrial numbers (NAD6, COX1/IV)
  • HO-1, PPARa
  • Heat shock proteins
  • Apoptosis inhibitors
  • Human gene map for performanceMed Sci
    Sports Exercise (2004) 36 1451-1469

47
ATROPHY vs HIBERNATION NEW DIRECTIONS
  • Hibernation more closely mimics
    EXERCISE !
  • UNANSWERED QUESTIONS
  • The Tfs Rb-P, ETS, chREBP, AP (1,2)
  • Cell cycle control kinases
  • Chromatin resculpting (Histones, SIRT,
    HDAC)
  • Bcl3, PARP, ELK-P, ERG, CREB(P), MyoD/G
    ID proteins

48
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49
HIBERNATION
  • J. STOREY
  • S. EDDY
  • D. HITTEL
  • J. MacDONALD
  • A. FAHLMAN
  • P. MORIN
  • C. HOLDEN
  • H. MEHRANI
  • J. NI
  • M. HAPSATOU
  • J. HALLENBECK
  • D. THOMAS
  • A. RUBTSOV
  • J. STEWART
  • S. BROOKS
  • C. FRANK

Funded by NSERC Canada
www.carleton.ca/kbstorey
50
TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS
  • ATF (Glucose Regulated Proteins)
  • HIF (O2), HSF (Hsp)
  • NFkB (IkB-P), Nrf-2 (GST), NRF-1
  • PPAR, PGC, RXR, chREBP, CREB-P
  • STAT, SMAD, p53-P, HNF, AP (1,2)
  • Methods EMSA, CHiP

51
GENES
Control by transcriptional regulation
Transcription
RNAs
Control by translational regulation
Translation
Control by proteases
No Modification
PROTEINS (ENZYMES)
INACTIVE ENZYME
Degradation
Covalent modification
Control by post- translational modification
FUNCTIONAL ENZYMES
Inhibition and Activation
Control at level of enzyme function
ACTIVE ENZYMES
www.carleton.ca/kbstorey
52
(No Transcript)
53
HIBERNATION HORMONES
  • Prehibernation (summer) Adiposity
  • Leptin GH Ghrelin
  • Hibernation (fall) BMR
  • Leptin

KEY removing the metabolic signal
of leptin during prehibernation
fattening
54
HIBERNATING BRAIN
  • Decrease metabolic activity overall
  • Some areas decrease to 0.04 of active
  • Decrease substrate useDecrease biosynthesis
  • Exception Suprachiasmatic nucleus (a)
    endogenous circadian oscillator (b) time
    keeper (c) if destroyed hibernation ceases
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