Publications by authors named "Hood W"

Article Synopsis
  • Migratory birds like the Gambel's white-crowned sparrow rely heavily on mitochondria for energy during their intense migration periods, which is energetically demanding.
  • In a study comparing Gambel's sparrows with non-migratory Nuttall's sparrows, it was found that the migratory birds showed significantly more mitochondrial remodelling in their muscles across different stages of migration.
  • The research indicates that this remodelling is particularly evident in the pectoralis muscle, which is crucial for flight, demonstrating an adaptive response that helps migratory birds meet their increased energy requirements.
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Birds exhibit a variety of migration strategies. Because sustained flapping flight requires the production of elevated levels of energy compared to typical daily activities, migratory birds are well-documented to have several physiological adaptations to support the energy demands of migration. However, even though mitochondria are the source of ATP that powers flight, the respiratory performance of the mitochondria is almost unstudied in the context of migration.

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Trade-offs resulting from the high demand of offspring production are a central focus of many subdisciplines within the field of biology. Yet, despite the historical and current interest on this topic, large gaps in our understanding of whole-organism trade-offs that occur in reproducing individuals remain, particularly as it relates to the nuances associated with female reproduction. This volume of Integrative and Comparative Biology (ICB) contains a series of papers that focus on reviewing trade-offs from the female-centered perspective of biology (i.

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Avian migration is among the most energetically demanding feats observed in animals. Studies evaluating the physiological underpinnings of migration have repeatedly shown that migratory birds display numerous adaptations that ultimately supply the flight muscle mitochondria with abundant fuel and oxygen during long-distance flights. To make use of this high input, the organs and mitochondria of migrants are predicted to display several traits that maximize their capacity to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP).

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The cost of supporting traits that increase mating opportunities and maximize the production of quality offspring is paid in energy. This currency of reproduction is enabled by bioenergetic adaptations that underlie the flexible changes in energy utilization that occur with reproduction. This review considers the traits that contribute to variation in the capacity of an organ to produce ATP.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Migration requires a lot of energy for birds, primarily sourced from mitochondria, but how these organelles support migration has been little studied.
  • - Researchers focused on the White-crowned Sparrow's two subspecies, comparing the high-migratory Gambel's with the non-migratory Nuttall's subspecies to assess their mitochondrial respiratory performance.
  • - Findings revealed Gambel's subspecies had significantly higher mitochondrial capacity and flexibility during migration, suggesting that changes in mitochondrial respiration are crucial for energy needs during long-distance migration.
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Space is a challenging environment that deregulates individual homeostasis. The main external hazards associated with spaceflight include ionizing space radiation, microgravity, isolation and confinement, distance from Earth, and hostile environment. Characterizing the biological responses to spaceflight environment is essential to validate the health risks, and to develop effective protection strategies.

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AbstractThrough artificial selection and inbreeding, strains of laboratory mice have been developed that vary in the expression of a single or suite of desired traits valuable to biomedical research. In addition to the selected trait(s), these strains also display variation in pelage color, body size, physiology, and life history. This article exploits the broad phenotypic variation across lab mouse strains to evaluate the relationships between life history and metabolism.

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The dairy industry depends upon the cow's successful lactation for economic profitability. Heat stress compromises the economic sustainability of the dairy industry by reducing milk production and increasing the risk of metabolic and pathogenic disease. Heat stress alters metabolic adaptations, such as nutrient mobilization and partitioning, that support the energetic demands of lactation.

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Researchers from diverse disciplines, including organismal and cellular physiology, sports science, human nutrition, evolution and ecology, have sought to understand the causes and consequences of the surprising variation in metabolic rate found among and within individual animals of the same species. Research in this area has been hampered by differences in approach, terminology and methodology, and the context in which measurements are made. Recent advances provide important opportunities to identify and address the key questions in the field.

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Our current understanding of variation in mitochondrial performance is incomplete. The production of ATP via oxidative phosphorylation is dependent, in part, on the structure of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Morphology of the inner membrane is crucial for the formation of the proton gradient across the inner membrane and, therefore, ATP synthesis.

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Reproduction and environmental stressors are generally thought to be associated with a cost to the individual experiencing them, but the physiological mechanisms mediating costs of reproduction and maternal effects remain poorly understood. Studies examining the effects of environmental stressors on a female's physiological state and body condition during reproduction, as well as the physiological condition of offspring, have yielded equivocal results. Mitochondrial physiology and oxidative stress have been implicated as important mediators of life-history trade-offs.

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Mitochondrial function is fundamental to organismal performance, health and fitness - especially during energetically challenging events, such as migration. With this investigation, we evaluated mitochondrial sensitivity to ecologically relevant stressors. We focused on an iconic migrant, the North American monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus), and examined the effects of two stressors: 7 days of food deprivation and infection by the protozoan parasite Ophryocystis elektroscirrha (known to reduce survival and flight performance).

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While the specific mechanisms of colour production in biological systems are diverse, the mechanics of colour production are straightforward and universal. Colour is produced through the selective absorption of light by pigments, the scattering of light by nanostructures or a combination of both. When copepods were fed a carotenoid-limited diet of yeast, their orange-red body coloration became faint, but their eyespots remained unexpectedly bright red.

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Mammals differ more than 100-fold in maximum lifespan. Here, we conducted comparative transcriptomics on 26 species with diverse lifespans. We identified thousands of genes with expression levels negatively or positively correlated with a species' maximum lifespan (Neg- or Pos-MLS genes).

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The insulin and insulin-like signalling (IIS) network plays an important role in mediating several life-history traits, including growth, reproduction and senescence. Although insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) 1 and 2 are both key hormones in the vertebrate IIS network, research on IGF2 in juveniles and adults has been largely neglected because early biomedical research on rodents found negligible IGF2 postnatal expression. Here, we challenge this assumption and ask to what degree IGF2 is expressed during postnatal life across amniotes by quantifying the relative gene expression of and using publicly available RNAseq data for 82 amniote species and quantitative polymerase chain reaction on liver cDNA at embryonic, juvenile and adult stages for two lizard, bird and mouse species.

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We evaluated mitochondrial dynamics and autophagy by investigating the acute and long-term changes in the liver and skeletal muscle of rats in multiple reproductive stages. A total of 48 rats were used. Rats were randomly assigned to three groups (n = 16 per group): nonreproductive females; females that became pregnant, gave birth, but had their pups removed at birth, and thus, did not lactate; and females that experienced pregnancy, gave birth, and were allowed to lactate.

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Lactation is physiologically demanding, requiring increased nutrient and energy use. Mammary and extramammary tissues undergo metabolic changes for lactation. Although it has long been recognized that mitochondria play a critical role in lactation, the mitochondrial adaptations for milk synthesis in supporting tissues, such as liver and skeletal muscle are relatively understudied.

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Mitochondrial energetics is a central theme in animal biochemistry and physiology, with researchers using mitochondrial respiration as a metric to investigate metabolic capability. To obtain the measures of mitochondrial respiration, fresh biological samples must be used, and the entire laboratory procedure must be completed within approximately 2 h. Furthermore, multiple pieces of specialized equipment are required to perform these laboratory assays.

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As milk production in dairy cattle continues to increase, so do the energetic and nutrient demands on the dairy cow. Difficulties making the necessary metabolic adjustments for lactation can impair lactation performance and increase the risk of metabolic disorders. The physiological adaptations to lactation involve the mammary gland and extramammary tissues that coordinately enhance the availability of precursors for milk synthesis.

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Biologists have long appreciated the critical role that energy turnover plays in understanding variation in performance and fitness among individuals. Whole-organism metabolic studies have provided key insights into fundamental ecological and evolutionary processes. However, constraints operating at subcellular levels, such as those operating within the mitochondria, can also play important roles in optimizing metabolism over different energetic demands and time scales.

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Article Synopsis
  • The immune function is crucial for cellular repair and survival, but fighting infections can be energy-intensive, particularly affecting metabolically active organs like the liver.
  • Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) is an immunosuppressive bacterium that severely impacts songbirds, especially house finches, by causing respiratory and eye infections.
  • Research showed MG-infected house finches had lower oxidative damage in their liver compared to uninfected birds, suggesting that MG might suppress liver function to help mitigate immune responses.
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The efficient production of energy via oxidative phosphorylation is essential to the growth, survival, and reproduction of eukaryotes. The behavior (position of, and communication between, mitochondria) and morphology of mitochondria play key roles in efficient energy production and are influenced by oxidative stressors such as ultraviolet (UV) radiation. We tested the hypothesis that mitochondria change their behavior and morphology to meet energetic demands of responding to changes in oxidative stress.

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Considerable progress has been made in understanding the physiological basis for variation in the life-history patterns of animals, particularly with regard to the roles of oxidative stress and hormonal regulation. However, an underappreciated and understudied area that could play a role in mediating inter- and intraspecific variation of life history is endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and the resulting unfolded protein response (UPR ). ER stress response and the UPR maintain proteostasis in cells by reducing the intracellular load of secretory proteins and enhancing protein folding capacity or initiating apoptosis in cells that cannot recover.

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One of the key foci of ecoimmunology is understanding the physiological interactions between reproduction and immune defense. To assess an immune challenge, investigators typically measure an immune response at a predetermined time point that was selected to represent a peak response. These time points often are based on the immunological responses of nonreproductive males.

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