Use este identificador para citar o ir al link de este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/1843/56252
Tipo: Artigo de Periódico
Título: Embryonic thermal manipulation affects ventilation, metabolism, thermal control and central dopamine in newly hatched and juvenile chicks
Autor(es): Aline Cristina Gonçales Rocha
Caroline Cistina Silva
Camila Linhares Taxini
Kaoma Stephani da Costa Silva
Virginia Tereza Morais Lima
Marcos Macari
Kenia Bicego
Raphael Escorsim Szawka
Luciane Gargaglioni
Resumen: The first third of incubation is critical for embryonic development, and environmental changes during this phase can affect the physiology and survival of the embryos. We evaluated the effects of low (LT), control (CT), and high (HT) temperatures during the first 5 days of incubation on ventilation (V. E), body temperature (Tb), oxygen consumption (V. O2), respiratory equivalent (V. E/V. O2), and brain monoamines on 3-days-old (3d) and 14-days-old (14d) male and female chickens. The body mass of LT animals of both ages and sexes was higher compared to HT and CT animals (except for 3d males). The heart mass of 14d HT animals was higher than that of CT animals. Thermal manipulation did not affect V. E, V. O2 or V. E/V. O2 of 3d animals in normoxia, except for 3d LT males V. E, which was lower than CT. Regarding 14d animals, the HT females showed a decrease in V. E and V. O2 compared to CT and LT groups, while the HT males displayed a lower V. O2 compared to CT males, but no changes in V. E/V. O2. Both sexes of 14d HT chickens presented a greater Tb compared to CT animals. Thermal manipulations increased the dopamine turnover in the brainstem of 3d females. No differences were observed in ventilatory and metabolic parameters in the 3d animals of either sexes, and 14d males under 7% CO2. The hypercapnic hyperventilation was attenuated in the 14d HT females due to changes in V. O2, without alterations in V. E. The 14d LT males showed a lower V. E, during hypercapnia, compared to CT, without changes in V. O2, resulting in an attenuation in V. E/V. O2. During hypoxia, 3d LT females showed an attenuated hyperventilation, modulated by a higher V. O2. In 14d LT and HT females, the increase in V. E was greater and the hypometabolic response was attenuated, compared to CT females, which resulted in no change in the V. E/V. O2. In conclusion, thermal manipulations affect hypercapnia-induced hyperventilation more so than hypoxic challenge, and at both ages, females are more affected by thermal manipulation than males.
Asunto: Temperatura
Ventilação
Incubação
Galinha
Idioma: por
País: Brasil
Editor: Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Sigla da Institución: UFMG
Departamento: ICB - DEPARTAMENTO DE FISIOLOGIA E BIOFÍSICA
Tipo de acceso: Acesso Aberto
Identificador DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.699142
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1843/56252
Fecha del documento: 2021
metadata.dc.url.externa: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.699142/full
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Frontiers in Physiology
Aparece en las colecciones:Artigo de Periódico



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