Frontiers in Zoology (May 2019)

Metabolic reprogramming involving glycolysis in the hibernating brown bear skeletal muscle

  • Blandine Chazarin,
  • Kenneth B. Storey,
  • Anna Ziemianin,
  • Stéphanie Chanon,
  • Marine Plumel,
  • Isabelle Chery,
  • Christine Durand,
  • Alina L. Evans,
  • Jon M. Arnemo,
  • Andreas Zedrosser,
  • Jon E. Swenson,
  • Guillemette Gauquelin-Koch,
  • Chantal Simon,
  • Stephane Blanc,
  • Etienne Lefai,
  • Fabrice Bertile

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12983-019-0312-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract Background In mammals, the hibernating state is characterized by biochemical adjustments, which include metabolic rate depression and a shift in the primary fuel oxidized from carbohydrates to lipids. A number of studies of hibernating species report an upregulation of the levels and/or activity of lipid oxidizing enzymes in muscles during torpor, with a concomitant downregulation for glycolytic enzymes. However, other studies provide contrasting data about the regulation of fuel utilization in skeletal muscles during hibernation. Bears hibernate with only moderate hypothermia but with a drop in metabolic rate down to ~ 25% of basal metabolism. To gain insights into how fuel metabolism is regulated in hibernating bear skeletal muscles, we examined the vastus lateralis proteome and other changes elicited in brown bears during hibernation. Results We show that bear muscle metabolic reorganization is in line with a suppression of ATP turnover. Regulation of muscle enzyme expression and activity, as well as of circulating metabolite profiles, highlighted a preference for lipid substrates during hibernation, although the data suggested that muscular lipid oxidation levels decreased due to metabolic rate depression. Our data also supported maintenance of muscle glycolysis that could be fuelled from liver gluconeogenesis and mobilization of muscle glycogen stores. During hibernation, our data also suggest that carbohydrate metabolism in bear muscle, as well as protein sparing, could be controlled, in part, by actions of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids like docosahexaenoic acid. Conclusions Our work shows that molecular mechanisms in hibernating bear skeletal muscle, which appear consistent with a hypometabolic state, likely contribute to energy and protein savings. Maintenance of glycolysis could help to sustain muscle functionality for situations such as an unexpected exit from hibernation that would require a rapid increase in ATP production for muscle contraction. The molecular data we report here for skeletal muscles of bears hibernating at near normal body temperature represent a signature of muscle preservation despite atrophying conditions.

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