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Maintenance of Bat Skeletal Muscle during Hibernation

Maintenance of Bat Skeletal Muscle during Hibernation. Kevin Ornee. Exercise. Change in skeletal muscle is dependent on use. Two muscle types: Fast (more glycolytic) Slow (more oxidative) Aerobic exercise increases mass and oxidative capacity of the muscle.

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Maintenance of Bat Skeletal Muscle during Hibernation

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  1. Maintenance of Bat Skeletal Muscle during Hibernation Kevin Ornee

  2. Exercise • Change in skeletal muscle is dependent on use. • Two muscle types: Fast (more glycolytic) Slow (more oxidative) • Aerobic exercise increases mass and oxidative capacity of the muscle. • Disuse decreases mass and oxidative capacity of the muscle.

  3. Atrophy • Humans experience profound disuse atrophy up to 50% reduction in mass in just 4 weeks. • Hibernating animals show reduced <30% to no atrophy over a period of 6 months. • Hibernating animals show increased oxidative capacity.

  4. Hibernation • Freezing temperatures, photoperiod and lack of food. • Torpor – Enter state of reduced body temp and metabolic rate. • Thermogenesis – quivering rapidly increases body temp.

  5. Hibernation Habits • Hang upside-down from ceiling of caves • Cave shelter 5-10°C • Arousal and relocation observed • Drafts/cold spots • Cold temps, food unlikely • Great risk of starvation

  6. Weight and Energy Issues • Little brown bats begin hibernation from 20-25 grams and lose ~ 35% of their body mass. • Able to fly upon arousal, great strength and fatigue resistance.

  7. Flight • Pectoralis muscle, highest oxidative capacity of mammalian skeletal muscle >90%. • Over six month hibernation period there is no change in fiber makeup of the pectoralis.

  8. Atrophy Prevention • May be attributed to many factors: • An adaptation • Tension created by wings • Muscle activity during arousal and relocation

  9. Flight Experiment • Limiting flight to stimulate disuse atrophy, small cage, large cage and wild. • Expected reduction in strength and oxidative capacity. • Contractile force measured. • Section of the muscle will be stained and analyzed to determine cross sectional area. • Immunoblots for CS and Akt.

  10. Wing Tension Experiment • While hanging, tension created by bats wings may initiate exercise feedback. • Increasing and decreasing tension would be expected to decrease and increase atrophy, respectively.

  11. Relocation Telemetry • Hibernation induced in cold rooms. • Bats subject to cold, drafty conditions are expected to relocate. • Bats with available food expected to benefit if aroused. • Control monitored for muscle activity during a full six month hibernation. • Electromyography use to remotely monitor muscle activity.

  12. Benefits • Comparison of bat to other hibernating species should show an increase in the mechanism to prevent disuse atrophy. • Application to human skeletal muscle would greatly benefit clinical orthopedics and space exploration.

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