The Gut Microbiota Modulates Energy Metabolism in the Hibernating Brown Bear Ursus arctos
Hibernation is an adaptation that helps many animals to conserve energy during food shortage in winter. Brown bears double their fat depots during summer and use these stored lipids during hibernation. Although bears seasonally become obese, they remain metabolically healthy. We analyzed the microbi...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hibernation is an adaptation that helps many animals
to conserve energy during food shortage in winter.
Brown bears double their fat depots during summer
and use these stored lipids during hibernation.
Although bears seasonally become obese, they
remain metabolically healthy. We analyzed the microbiota
of free-ranging brown bears during their
active phase and hibernation. Compared to the
active phase, hibernation microbiota had reduced diversity,
reduced levels of Firmicutes and Actinobacteria,
and increased levels of Bacteroidetes. Several
metabolites involved in lipid metabolism, including
triglycerides, cholesterol, and bile acids, were also
affected by hibernation. Transplantation of the bear
microbiota from summer and winter to germ-free
mice transferred some of the seasonal metabolic features
and demonstrated that the summer microbiota
promoted adiposity without impairing glucose tolerance,
suggesting that seasonal variation in the microbiota
may contribute to host energy metabolism
in the hibernating brown bear. |
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ISSN: | 1655-1661 |