Abstract

The present study examined how food availability interacts with age to modulate lizard adrenal steroidogenic function at the cellular level. Adult male and juvenile male and female Eastern Fence Lizards (Sceloporus undulatus) underwent a period of food deprivation with or without a shorter re-feeding period. Lizards maintained on a full feeding regimen served as the controls. Across the feeding regimens, plasma corticosterone of adult lizards was unchanged whereas that of food-deprived juvenile lizards was increased nearly 7 times and this increase was normalized by a short re-feeding period. Freshly dispersed adrenocortical cells derived from these lizards were incubated with ACTH and the production of selected steroids was measured by highly specific radioimmunoassay. Net maximal steroid rates of juvenile cells were 161% greater than those of adult cells. Adult and juvenile progesterone rates were consistently suppressed by food deprivation (by nearly 48%) and were normalized by a re-feeding period, whereas divergent effects were seen with corticosterone and aldosterone rates. Food deprivation suppressed corticosterone rates of adult cells by 43% but not those of juvenile cells. In a reciprocal manner, food deprivation had no significant effect on aldosterone rates of adult cells, but it suppressed those of juvenile cells by 52%. A short re-feeding period normalized most rates in both adult and juvenile cells and further augmented the adult aldosterone rate by 54%. The effect of the feeding regimens on ACTH sensitivity varied with life stage and with steroid. The overall sensitivity of adult cells to ACTH was nearly three times that of juvenile cells. Collectively, the data presented here and data from previous work indicate that food restriction/deprivation in Sceloporus lizard species causes a functional remodeling of the adrenocortical tissue. Furthermore, life stage adds more complexity to this remodeling.

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