HHMI Undergraduate Researcher Turns Up the Heat on HibernationFebruary 01, 2006If doctors could put people in hibernation and pull them out at will, scientists think they could minimize damage from strokes, help recipients' bodies accept transplanted organs, perhaps even enable astronauts to travel in suspended animation until reaching distant destinations. But up to now, researchers have not understood the molecular mechanism controlling hibernation-like states. An HHMI-supported undergraduate's research, published in the January 2006 Journal of Neuroscience, describes for the first time the specific mechanism mice use to enter torpor, a hibernation-like state that enables them to survive periods of fasting during cool weather. Ross Smith is a co-author of the paper from researchers at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, and Emory University in Atlanta. Smith conducted the research as an undergraduate in Williams' biologist Steven J. Swoap's laboratory, as part of the college's HHMI-supported undergraduate science education program. A June 2005 graduate of Williams, Smith is now a technician in Gokhan Hotamisligil's laboratory at Harvard University. "We were trying to figure out what signaling pathway was involved in allowing mice to go in and out of torpor," explained Smith. Working with Swoap, he helped show that torpor is controlled by the same system that controls fight-or-flight responses and further, that it involves the stimulation of receptors for epinephrine (adrenaline) and norepinephrine, called adrenergic receptors, most likely those found in fat stores. The work on torpor began in Swoap's lab when he observed that knock-out mice that cannot synthesize the neurotransmitters norepinephrine or epinephrine do not enter torpor when they fast. In 2004, Smith joined Swoap's research team as an HHMI summer research fellow. Williams College, like more than 100 colleges and universities throughout the United States, has an undergraduate science education grant from HHMI to encourage and support undergraduate research opportunities. Swoap said that work by students like Smith is critical to the pace of science at an undergraduate campus like Williams. "The undergraduates are the ones that spark the ideas and generate the enthusiasm. They drive the research," the biology professor said. Smith showed that replacement of epinephrine or adrenaline to the peripheral nervous system, and not to the brain, determines whether an animal enters torpor. "We could replace the neurotransmitters in the brain and still not get torpor in these mice," Smith said. Torpor was restored when the neurotransmitters were made available at nerve-endings in the periphery. The undergraduate also found that the ability to enter torpor could be restored in the knock-out mice through the use of a synthetic amino acid that enabled production of the two neurotransmitters. "This was an extremely important control," Swoap said. Smith also generated data showing that low body temperatures achieved during torpor are maintained by the animal and are not just due to heat loss. Up to now, most research on torpor focused on which animals enter the state. Swoap predicted his team's findings will move the field in a new direction. "It's going to draw more basic researchers into studying the mechanism," he said. Some scientists are already thinking about the human applications of torpor research, Swoap added. "It would be extremely beneficial, for example, for a person to have a low metabolic rate during surgery to avoid injury," he said. "The ability to pull people in and out of a hibernation-like state at will, if it can be accomplished, is decades away," he said, "but, this is a first step in that direction.". Howard Hughes Medical Institute |
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| Related Hibernation Current Events and Hibernation News Articles Rosetta bound for outer Solar System after final Earth swingby This morning, mission controllers confirmed that ESA's comet chaser Rosetta had swung by Earth at 8:45 CET as planned, skimming past our planet to pick up a gravitational boost for an epic journey to rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014. Follow Rosetta's final Earth boost ESA's comet chaser Rosetta will swing by Earth for the last time on 13 November to pick up energy and begin the final leg of its 10-year journey to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. ESA's European Space Operations Centre will host a media briefing on that day. Biologist discovers pink-winged moth in Chiracahua Mountains University of Arizona biologist Bruce Walsh has identified a new species of moth in southern Arizona. Normally, this is not a big deal. Ecologists propose first prevention for white-nose syndrome death in bats White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a poorly understood condition that, in the two years since its discovery, has spread to at least seven northeastern states and killed as many as half a million bats. Now researchers have suggested the first step toward a measure that may help save the affected bats: providing localized heat sources to the hibernating animals. Mate or hibernate? That's the question worm pheromones answer If worms could talk, they might tell potential suitors, "I like the way you wriggle," complete with that telltale come slither look. 'Hibernation-on-demand' drug significantly improves survival after extreme blood loss For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that the administration of minute amounts of inhaled or intravenous hydrogen sulfide, or H2S - the molecule that gives rotten eggs their sulfurous stench - significantly improves survival from extreme blood loss in rats. Foot-dragging Mars rover finds Yellowstone-like hot spring deposits Deposits of nearly pure silica discovered by the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit in Gusev Crater formed when volcanic steam or hot water (or maybe both) percolated through the ground. Dying bats in the Northeast remain a mystery Investigations continue into the cause of a mysterious illness that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of bats since March 2008. At more than 25 caves and mines in the northeastern U.S, bats exhibiting a condition now referred to as "white-nosed syndrome" have been dying. Vive the vole! The gathering of data for research involving an animal usually involves invasive procedures or death for the experimental animals. But critical data may now be collected through a nonlethal procedure, according to a new paper for the forthcoming issue of Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. Hibernation-like behavior in Antarctic fish -- on ice for winter Scientists have discovered an Antarctic fish species that adopts a winter survival strategy similar to hibernation. Reporting this week in the journal PLoS ONE, the online journal from the Public Library of Science, scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and the University of Birmingham reveal, for the first time, that the Antarctic 'cod' Notothenia coriiceps effectively 'puts itself on ice' to survive the long Antarctic winter. More Hibernation Current Events and Hibernation News Articles |
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