PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rats control appetite for poison

How rodents survive arms race with toxic plants they eat

Rats control appetite for poison
2011-08-09
(Press-News.org) SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 9, 2011 – Life is tough for woodrats in deserts of the U.S. Southwest. There are few plants for food, and those plants produce poison to deter rodents, insects and other animals. A new University of Utah study shows how certain woodrats put themselves on a diet to avoid poisoning: They sample a smorgasbord of toxic plants, eat smaller meals, increase time between meals and drink more water if it is available.

"For decades, we have been trying to understand how herbivores deal with toxic diets," says biology Professor Denise Dearing, senior author of the study, published online Tuesday, Aug. 9 in the British Ecological Society's journal Functional Ecology.

"This study compares woodrats that eat only a single plant – juniper – with another species that eats several kinds of plants, including a small amount of juniper," Dearing says. "We were trying to understand how they regulate the dose of toxic chemicals they eat by observing how often and how much they ate."

"We found that the woodrat that eats many types of plants was better at limiting toxin intake than the woodrat that eats only juniper," she adds.

The "specialists" – woodrats that eat only juniper – have evolved liver enzymes to metabolize large amounts of juniper toxins, so they did not change the amount of juniper they ate and did not drink more water. But "generalists" – woodrats that can metabolize small amounts of many different plant toxins – actually changed their eating and drinking behavior to avoid an excessive dose of any one plant poison.

Dearing conducted the research with first author and Utah biology Ph.D. student Ann-Marie Torregrossa – who now is a postdoctoral fellow at Florida State University – and Anthony Azzara of Bristol-Myers Squibb in Princeton, N.J. The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the American Museum of Natural History.

A Tale of Two Species

Plants have evolved an astonishing number of toxins to try to fend off animals that eat them, including rodents and primarily insects. To counter that, animals known as specialists evolved the liver enzymes needed to specialize in eating one or a few species of poisonous plants. Specialist herbivores include koalas, pandas, the greater glider, Abert's squirrel near the Grand Canyon and some woodrat species like Stephen's.

Dearing's research used two species of woodrats from the Southwest's vast Great Basin. The first is the white-throated woodrat, Neotoma albigula, a generalist that eats several different toxic plants such as juniper, sagebrush and yucca. The second is Stephen's woodrat, Neotoma stephensi, a specialist that eats 90 percent juniper.

Toxins in a number of desert plants damage the nervous system, disrupt absorption of nutrients, hinder growth and cause water loss and malaise.

"We are interested in knowing how the rats adjust their toxin intake so they don't poison themselves and die," says Dearing. "They live in deserts where plants evolved toxins to protect themselves, and the woodrats don't have much choice in what to eat."

"A lot people in this field focus on trying to understand how the specialist deals with high concentrations of toxins," she adds. "But generalists in some ways have it harder than specialists because they eat so many different poisons that they have to know when to stop for each poison. We were interested in whether they do that in the course of a night or in the course of a meal." The answer: during each meal.

For the study, white-throated woodrats were collected from Castle Valley, Utah, and Stephen's woodrats were taken from an area near Arizona's Wupatki National Monument.

Generalist Rats Go on a Diet to Prevent Poisoning

The study began with 11 generalist white-throated woodrats and seven specialist Stephen's woodrats. Both species were fed increasing concentrations of the normal food of the specialist Stephen's woodrat: one-seeded juniper, which contains a few dozen toxins called terpenes, particularly alpha-pinene, which is found in turpentine.

Alpha pinene causes water loss, so rats that doubled their water intake remained healthy enough to stay in the study. Six generalists had to drop out because they lost 10 percent of their body weight, a sign they would die if they continued in the study.

Juniper foliage was collected, ground fine in a blender, dried and mixed with ground rabbit chow. Both nocturnal woodrat species were fed increasing juniper concentrations in their diet for three straight nights each: none, 25 percent, 50 percent, 75 percent and 90 percent juniper.

The rats' weight, food and water intake, and feeding behavior were monitored during the 15 days. Feeders on electronic balances measured how much each rat ate. A meal began when a rat ate at least 0.1 gram of food. A meal was defined as over when the rat went five minutes or more without eating.

The specialist woodrats maintained or gained weight, and did not significantly change how much or how often they ate. They didn't change their water intake. But as juniper toxin concentration in the generalist woodrats' food increased from none to 90 percent, those rats lost weight, cut total food intake and meal size in half, ate 7 percent fewer meals, increased time between meals by 10 percent and drank twice as much water.

While toxin levels rose from the diet with no juniper diet to diet with 50 percent juniper, there were no further increases on diets with 50 percent, 75 percent and 90 percent juniper, showing the generalist woodrats were regulating their intake, first by increasing the time between meals, and then by reducing meal size.

The captured animals were given unlimited tap water. How much water the generalist woodrats drank was the only factor that predicted if they were able to avoid excessive weight loss and thus remain in the experiment. They still had to handle the same dose of poison as rats that dropped out, but "we think the water just helps them eliminate it better," Dearing says.

The findings raise a mystery: how do generalist, white-throated woodrats know when to eat less? What is their poison-detection system? Dearing doubts they simply feel ill and reduce their intake.

"We think there are receptors in the gut that have a way of monitoring the intake of poisons," she says. "They may be bitter-taste receptors like those on the tongue. Other researchers have found them in the gut of other rodents." If enough are activated, that may signal the brain to make the woodrat to stop eating as much, she speculates.



INFORMATION:

University of Utah Public Relations
201 Presidents Circle, Room 308
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9017
(801) 581-6773 fax: (801) 585-3350
www.unews.utah.edu


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Rats control appetite for poison

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A change in perspective could be all it takes to succeed in school

2011-08-09
Knowing the right way to handle stress in the classroom and on the sports field can make the difference between success and failure for the millions of students going back to school this fall, new University of Chicago research shows. "We found that cortisol, a hormone released in response to stress, can either be tied to a student's poor performance on a math test or contribute to success, depending on the frame of mind of the student going into the test," said Sian Beilock, associate professor in psychology at UChicago and one of the nation's leading experts on poor ...

Virtual Desktop Provider Desktop Anywhere Launches New Service Due to Increasing Demand for UK Cloud Computing Services

Virtual Desktop Provider Desktop Anywhere Launches New Service Due to Increasing Demand for UK Cloud Computing Services
2011-08-09
Desktop Anywhere is a UK cloud computing company specialising in virtual desktops and cloud computing services for companies with anywhere between 5-1,000 users. With clients in various industries such as finance, property investment, fashion, professional services and publishing, they are a trusted IT partner for any serious organisation looking at cloud hosting. August 2011 sees the launch of a new VMware based cloud platform designed to meet the needs of existing and future customers, with enhanced features such as server and data replication, fast graphic streaming, ...

New York Workers' Compensation for "On the Job" Injuries

2011-08-09
The law in New York, and in many states, prohibits an employee from suing either their employer, or a fellow worker, for any incident that may have harmed that employee during the course of his employment. The idea behind this is basically to promote harmony and efficiency in the workplace which would soon disappear if workers and employers were suing each other. To protect the harmed worker, a system of "Workers' Compensation" has been created. Workers Compensation assures employees that in the event they are injured "on the job," then they will ...

Las lamparas UV de secado de unas estan relacionadas con el cancer de piel

2011-08-09
Cuando entramos en una tienda o negocio, confiamos en que los productos utilizados en su interior no sean perjudiciales. Tambien confiamos en que si el negocio utiliza o vende productos perjudiciales, se nos advierta del riesgo para que tomemos decisiones fundadas sobre si utilizar o no dichos productos. Segun algunos informes del New York Times y Houston Chronicle, muchos centros de estetica de unas no cumplen dichas expectativas. Muchos spa y centros de estetica utilizan lamparas UV para que acelerar el secado de las unas. Estas lamparas tambien se venden habitualmente ...

BingoBabe Ltd Partner With Top Online Bingo Companies

2011-08-09
BingoBabe.co.uk has formed a number of new exciting partnerships with top online bingo companies. BingoBabe.co.uk features impartial and honest consumer reviews coupled with links to the best online bingo bonuses and deals. The newly launched bingo website has steadily increased its popularity and has shown month on month unique visitor increases for the last 6 months. Two of the sites latest partnerships include Ruby Bingo http://www.bingobabe.co.uk/ruby-bingo/ and Cheeky Bingo http://www.bingobabe.co.uk/cheeky-bingo/ The new Ruby Bingo partnership offers ...

WineTask Expedites Wine & Alcohol Compliance

WineTask Expedites Wine & Alcohol Compliance
2011-08-09
Wine industry veteran Claudia Zimmermann announced today the formal launch of WineTask, a new wine compliance consulting firm. Based on Zimmermann's 10+ years of alcoholic beverage industry experience in the United States and abroad, WineTask provides clients with a clear strategy to expedite logistics, handle wine and beverage compliance across federal and state lines, and minimize the potential for non-compliance penalties. "WineTask is the culmination of all my wine industry experience and compliance knowledge," says Zimmermann."The company mission ...

Kyle Hosick, President of Addrenaline Media, Excited to Announce Partnership with Canadian Beauty Staple Caryl Baker Visage

2011-08-09
"We're thrilled to be helping Caryl Baker Visage re-energize their brand with a complete suite of social media strategies and a web design that will make them the envy of the other large players in the beauty business," said Kyle Hosick, President, Addrenaline Media. Addrenaline's focus will be on encapsulating the long tradition CBV has with helping Canadian women feel and look their best, using web design and video components that will engage the existing market and open doors to a younger, social media-influenced audience. Website visitors will be able ...

The Ciclomulino - An Innovative Training Tool for Cyclists and Fitness Fans Now in Australia

2011-08-06
Fabio Petró, the owner of Your Cycling Trainer in Sydney's Wollstonecraft and a former semi-professional master cyclist from Italy, has, for the first time, introduced The Ciclomulino to the Australian cycling community. The Ciclomulino is a resistance aerodynamic cyclo ergometer, and is commonly used by professional and semi-professional cyclists, runners and triathletes to develop peak performance. Developed in the 1990s, it has now become a professional and precise tool for evaluation tests and to develop tailored training programs. "The initial fitness test ...

GreenWorld BVI Introduces Socially Responsible Timber Investment in Germany for Retail Investors

2011-08-06
As world financial markets plunge, boutique alternative investment firm GreenWorld BVI has introduced a unique timber investment targeted at retail investors. GreenWorld BVI is offering a timber investment due to the low correlation of forestry and timber investments to financial assets such as stocks and bonds. The firm also believes that timber investments offer a safe haven should inflation accelerate as the money printed by global central banks works its way into economies. The timber investment opportunity is based in Germany, and involves the unique Paulownia ...

SolarVolt Power - Builds First Solar Modules That Carry a Lifetime Warranty

2011-08-06
Up until now, solar module manufacturers have always offered at best, an 8 year warranty on frame construction and 25 years on power output. Given the cost of equipment and installation, a complete residential solar power system can easily run into the tens of thousands of dollars, and the ROI can be up to 25 years. That fact is hard to swallow; that the warranty would run out just when you're starting to save money. The people at SolarVolt Power have done extensive research in the area of product longevity, using many different types of cell encapsulates and alternative ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Quantitative study assesses how gender and race impact young athletes’ perceptions of their coaches

Enzymes open new path to universal donor blood

Gemini south reveals origin of unexpected differences in giant binary stars

Hornets found to be primary pollinators of two Angelica species

Aspirin vs placebo as adjuvant therapy for breast cancer

Association of new-onset seizures with SARS-CoV-2 vaccines

How can forests be reforested in a climate-friendly way?

More plants on the menu of ancient hunter-gatherers

The aspirin conundrum: navigating negative results, age, aging dynamics and equity

Cancer screening rates are significantly lower in US federally qualified health centers

Nature's nudge: Study shows green views lead to healthier food choices

AI algorithms can determine how well newborns nurse, study shows

Scientists develop new organoid model to study thymus function

A revised classification of primary iron overload syndromes

Expanding health equity by including nursing home residents in clinical trials

Identification and exploration of transcripts involved in antibiotic resistance mechanism of two critical superbugs

Quantum fiber optics in the brain enhance processing, may protect against degenerative diseases

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai names Miriam Merad, MD, PhD, as Dean for Translational Research and Therapeutic Innovation

Details of hurricane Ian’s aftermath captured with new remote sensing method

Robots can’t outrun animals. A new study explores why

The Human Immunome Project unveils scientific plan to decode and model the immune system

New research funding awarded to assess the role of race in predicting heart disease

Exploring the role of seven key genes in breast cancer: insights from in silico and in vitro analyses

The therapeutic effects of baicalein on the hepatopulmonary syndrome in the rat model of chronic common bile duct ligation

Development and characterization of honey-containing nanoemulsion for topical delivery

Decoding cellular ‘shape-shifters’

"Seeing the invisible": new tech enables deep tissue imaging during surgery

After 25 years, researchers uncover genetic cause of rare neurological disease

Probing the effects of interplanetary space on asteroid Ryugu

T. rex not as smart as previously claimed, scientists find

[Press-News.org] Rats control appetite for poison
How rodents survive arms race with toxic plants they eat