Abstract

13-lined ground squirrels, Ictidomys tridecemlineatus, are obligate hibernators that transition annually between summer homeothermy and winter heterothermy – wherein they exploit episodic torpor bouts. Despite cerebral ischemia during torpor and rapid reperfusion during arousal, hibernator brains resist damage and the animals emerge neurologically intact each spring. We hypothesized that protein changes in the brain underlie winter neuroprotection. To identify candidate proteins, we applied a sensitive 2D gel electrophoresis method to quantify protein differences among forebrain extracts prepared from ground squirrels in two summer, four winter and fall transition states. Proteins that differed among groups were identified using LC-MS/MS. Only 84 protein spots varied significantly among the defined states of hibernation. Protein changes in the forebrain proteome fell largely into two reciprocal patterns with a strong body temperature dependence. The importance of body temperature was tested in animals from the fall; these fall animals use torpor sporadically with body temperatures mirroring ambient temperatures between 4 and 21°C as they navigate the transition between summer homeothermy and winter heterothermy. Unlike cold-torpid fall ground squirrels, warm-torpid individuals strongly resembled the homeotherms, indicating that the changes observed in torpid hibernators are defined by body temperature, not torpor per se. Metabolic enzymes were largely unchanged despite varied metabolic activity across annual and torpor-arousal cycles. Instead, the majority of the observed changes were cytoskeletal proteins and their regulators. While cytoskeletal structural proteins tended to differ seasonally, i.e., between summer homeothermy and winter heterothermy, their regulatory proteins were more strongly affected by body temperature. Changes in the abundance of various isoforms of the microtubule assembly and disassembly regulatory proteins dihydropyrimidinase-related protein and stathmin suggested mechanisms for rapid cytoskeletal reorganization on return to euthermy during torpor-arousal cycles.

Highlights

  • Hibernation includes some of the most dramatic physiological changes tolerated by mammals

  • We examined phosphoprotein staining as evidence of posttranslational protein modification (PTM) in forebrain samples from inter-bout arousal (IBA) and EAr animals (n = 3 per state). 150 mg of unlabeled protein from each sample were separated on 2D gels (DiGE protocol), fixed overnight (50% MeOH, 10% acetic acid), stained for phospho-proteins (ProQ Diamond, Molecular Probes followed by total protein staining (SYPRO Ruby) as described [26]

  • Forebrain Proteomic Changes are Limited and Associated with Body Temperature In six physiologically defined hibernation states of 13-lined ground squirrels (Fig. 1) we detected 84 protein spots that differed significantly among groups. 56 of these were successfully identified by LC-MS/MS, which represented 34 unique proteins due to multiple isoforms (Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Hibernation includes some of the most dramatic physiological changes tolerated by mammals. In ground squirrels, this natural feature of life history involves transition from a summer homeothermic to a winter heterothermic state. The system is challenged during rewarming when metabolic rates rise in advance of perfusion, leading to tissue hypoxemia and ischemia-reperfusion events [3,5]. These hibernators reversibly orchestrate torporarousal cycles throughout winter with no observable long-term tissue damage [5]

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