Abstract

Hibernating animals undergo a unique and reversible decrease in their whole-body metabolism, which is often accompanied by a suppression of mitochondrial respiration. However, the precise mechanisms underlying these seasonal shifts in mitochondrial metabolism remain unclear. In this study, the effect of the serum from active and hibernating Japanese black bears on mitochondrial respiration was assessed. Stromal–vascular cells were obtained from bear white adipose tissue and cultured with or without an adipocyte differentiation cocktail. When the oxygen consumption was measured in the presence of bear serum, the hibernating bear serum reduced maximal respiration by 15.5 % (p < 0.05) and spare respiratory capacity by 46.0 % (p < 0.01) in the differentiated adipocytes in comparison to the active bear serum. Similar reductions of 23.4 % (p = 0.06) and 40.6 % (p < 0.05) respectively were observed in undifferentiated cells, indicating the effect is cell type-independent. Blue native PAGE analysis revealed that hibernating bear serum suppressed cellular metabolism independently of the assembly of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes. RNA-seq analysis identified 1094 differentially expressed genes (fold change>1.5, FDR<0.05) related to insulin signaling and glucose metabolism pathways. These findings suggest that the rapid alterations in mitochondrial metabolism during hibernation are likely induced by a combination of reduced insulin signaling and suppressed mitochondrial function, rather than changes in respiratory complex assembly.

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