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Nitric oxide metabolites in hypoxia, freezing, and hibernation of the wood frog, Rana sylvatica
Author(s) -
B. L. Williams,
James M. Wiebler,
Richard Lee,
Jon P. Costanzo
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of comparative physiology b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.814
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1432-136X
pISSN - 0174-1578
DOI - 10.1007/s00360-018-1182-1
Subject(s) - hibernation (computing) , acclimatization , biology , amphibian , nitric oxide , hypoxia (environmental) , medicine , ecology , endocrinology , chemistry , oxygen , state (computer science) , algorithm , organic chemistry , computer science
Nitric oxide (NO) is a gaseous free radical that in diverse organisms performs many signaling and protective functions, such as vasoregulation, inhibition of apoptosis, antioxidation, and metabolic suppression. Increased availability of NO may be especially important during life-history periods when organisms contend with multiple stresses. We investigated dynamics of the NO metabolites, nitrite (NO 2 - ) and nitrate (NO 3 - ), in the blood plasma, heart, liver, and skeletal muscle of the wood frog (Rana sylvatica), an amphibian that endures chronic cold, freezing, hypoxia, dehydration, and extended aphagia during hibernation. We found elevated concentrations of NO 2 - and/or NO 3 - in the plasma (up to 4.1-fold), heart (3.1-fold), and liver (up to 4.1-fold) of frogs subjected to experimental hypoxia (24 h, 4 °C), and in the liver (up to 3.8-fold) of experimentally frozen frogs (48 h, - 2.5 °C), suggesting that increased NO availability aids in survival of these stresses. During a 38-week period of simulated hibernation, NO 2 - and/or NO 3 - increased in the plasma (up to 10.4-fold), heart (up to 3.3-fold), and liver (5.0-fold) during an initial 5-week winter-acclimatization regimen and generally remained elevated thereafter. In hibernation, plasma NO 2 - was higher in frogs indigenous to Interior Alaska than in conspecifics from a temperate locale (southern Ohio), suggesting that NO availability is matched to the severity of environmental conditions prevailing in winter. The comparatively high NO availability in R. sylvatica, a stress-tolerant species, together with published values for other species, suggest that the NO protection system is of general importance in the stress adaptation of vertebrates.

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