Arousal and re-feeding rapidly restores digestive tract morphology following aestivation in green-striped burrowing frogs


Autoria(s): Cramp, R. L.; Franklin, C. E.
Contribuinte(s)

Patrick J Walsh (Editor-in-Chief)

Thomas P Mommsen (Editor -in-Chief)

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

During aestivation, the gut of the green-striped burrowing frog, Cyclorana alboguttata undergoes significant morphological down-regulation. Despite the potential impact such changes might have on the re-feeding efficiency of these animals following aestivation, they appear to be as efficient at digesting their first meals as active, non-aestivating animals. Such efficiency might come about by the rapid restoration of intestinal morphology with both arousal from aestivation and the initial stages of re-feeding. Consequently, this study sought to determine what morphological changes to the intestine accompany arousal and re-feeding following 3 months of aestivation. Arousal from aestivation alone had a marked impact on many morphological parameters, including small and large intestine masses, small intestinal length, LF heights, enterocyte cross-sectional area and microvilli height and density. In addition, the onset of re-feeding was correlated with an immediate reversal of many morphological parameters affected by 3 months of aestivation. Those parameters that had not returned to control levels within 36 h of feeding generally had returned to control values by the completion of digestion (i.e. defecation of the meal). Re-feeding was also associated with several changes in enterocyte morphology including the incorporation in intracytoplasmic lipid droplets and the return of enterocyte nuclear material to the 'active' euchromatin state: In conclusion, morphological changes to the gut of aestivating frogs which occur during aestivation are transitory and rapidly reversible with both arousal from aestivation and re-feeding. The proximate causes behind these transitions and their functional significance are discussed. (C) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:77535

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Science Inc

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Physiology #Zoology #Up-regulation #Small Intestine #Enterocyte #Prolonged Starvation #Fasting #Food-deprivation #Recovery #Rat Small-intestine #Protein-synthesis #Physiological-responses #Structural Flexibility #Gastrointestinal-tract #Cyclorana-alboguttata #Mucosal Structure #Seasonal-changes #Starvation #Hibernation #C1 #270604 Comparative Physiology #780107 Studies in human society
Tipo

Journal Article