Lipid-induced thermogenesis is up-regulated by the first cold-water immersions in juvenile penguins.

J Comp Physiol B

Laboratoire d'Ecologie des Hydrosystèmes Naturels et Anthropisés, UMR 5023 CNRS, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, ENTPE, Lyon, Bâtiment Charles Darwin C, 69622, Villeurbanne cedex, France.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how juvenile king penguins adapt their metabolism and body temperature regulation when transitioning from land to cold water environments, focusing on lipid metabolism and thermogenesis.
  • Two groups of pre-fledging king penguins were compared: those never exposed to cold water and those subjected to a series of cold water immersions over three weeks.
  • Results showed that both groups maintained stable body temperatures in cold water, but only the cold-immersed penguins displayed a significantly increased fat-burning response when given a lipid emulsion, suggesting limited adaptation despite cold exposure.

Article Abstract

The passage from shore to marine life is a critical step in the development of juvenile penguins and is characterized by a fuel selection towards lipid oxidation concomitant to an enhancement of lipid-induced thermogenesis. However, mechanisms of such thermogenic improvement at fledging remain undefined. We used two different groups of pre-fledging king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) to investigate the specific contribution of cold exposure during water immersion to lipid metabolism. Terrestrial penguins that had never been immersed in cold water were compared with experimentally cold-water immersed juveniles. Experimentally immersed penguins underwent ten successive immersions at approximately 9-10 °C for 5 h over 3 weeks. We evaluated adaptive thermogenesis by measuring body temperature, metabolic rate and shivering activity in fully immersed penguins exposed to water temperatures ranging from 12 to 29 °C. Both never-immersed and experimentally immersed penguins were able to maintain their homeothermy in cold water, exhibiting similar thermogenic activity. In vivo, perfusion of lipid emulsion at thermoneutrality induced a twofold larger calorigenic response in experimentally immersed than in never-immersed birds. In vitro, the respiratory rates and the oxidative phosphorylation efficiency of isolated muscle mitochondria were not improved with cold-water immersions. The present study shows that acclimation to cold water only partially reproduced the fuel selection towards lipid oxidation that characterizes penguin acclimatization to marine life.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-016-0975-3DOI Listing

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