Mating behavior is controlled by acute changes in metabolic fuels

Blood Glucose Male 0301 basic medicine 2. Zero hunger Time Factors Shrews Fatty Acids Organ Size Animal Feed Dietary Fats Eating Sexual Behavior, Animal 03 medical and health sciences Glucose Adipose Tissue Animals Female Food Deprivation Oxidation-Reduction
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00383.2001 Publication Date: 2015-03-03T15:23:57Z
ABSTRACT
Mild food restriction for 48 h inhibits mating behavior in female musk shrews ( Suncus murinus). However, mating behavior is restored after a 90-min feeding bout. In this series of experiments, we examined the role of metabolic fuels in this behavioral restoration. First, drugs reported to block glycolysis or fatty acid oxidation were given 2 h before mating. Both treatments inhibited mating in food-restricted females that were refed after treatment. Blood glucose levels were assessed in females that were fed ad libitum, food restricted, or food restricted and refed for 90 min. Food restriction significantly lowered blood glucose compared with ad libitum feeding or food restriction in combination with 90 min of refeeding. However, neither glucose nor fat alone could substitute for food and promote mating behavior in food-restricted females. In addition, analysis of ketone bodies and body composition in females demonstrated low or undetectable levels of these energy substrates. Our data suggest that musk shrews have relatively little stored energy. Therefore, female musk shrews rely on continuous food intake and monitor multiple cues acutely, including glucose availability and fatty acid oxidation. This ensures that mating does not occur when adequate energy is unavailable.
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