Changes in diet, body mass and fatty acid composition during pre-hibernation in a subtropical bat in relation to NPY and AgRP expression

Male Adipose Tissue, White Hypothalamus bats bat Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated Food Preferences 03 medical and health sciences Hibernation Chiroptera Animals Body Size Animalia Agouti-Related Protein Neuropeptide Y Israel Chordata 0303 health sciences Behavior, Animal Ants Fatty Acids Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental Biodiversity Carnivory Mammalia Body Composition Female Seasons
DOI: 10.1007/s00360-012-0689-0 Publication Date: 2012-07-27T23:01:19Z
ABSTRACT
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Prior to hibernation, mammals accumulate large amounts of fat in their bodies. In temperate mammalian species, hibernation is improved by increasing the levels of poly-unsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in the body. The saturation of fatty acids (FA) in both white adipose tissue (WAT) and membrane phospholipids of mammals often reflects their diet composition. We found that the greater mouse-tailed bat (Rhinopoma microphyllum) accumulates large amounts of fat at the end of summer by gradually shifting to a fat-rich diet (queen carpenter ants, Camponotus felah). PUFA are almost absent in this diet (\1 % of total FA), which contains a high fraction of saturated (SFA) and mono-unsaturated (MUFA) fatty acids. We found similar low levels of PUFA in mousetailed bat WAT, but not in their heart total lipids. The expression of two appetite-stimulating (orexigenic) hypothalamic neuropeptides, AgRP and NPY, increased in parallel to the shift in diet and with fat gain in these bats. To the best of our knowledge, this is the only documented example of specific pre-hibernation diet in bats, and one which reveals the most saturated FA composition ever documented in a mammal. We suggest that the increase in expression levels of NPY and AgRP may contribute to the observed diet shift and mass gain, and that the FA composition of the bat's specialized diet is adaptive in the relatively high temperatures we recorded in both their winter and summer roosts.
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