Data from: Managing anabolic steroids in pre-hibernating Arctic ground squirrels: obtaining their benefits and avoiding their costs ...

Androgens have benefits, such as promoting muscle growth, but also significant costs, including suppression of immune function. In many species, these trade-offs in androgen action are reflected in regulated androgen production, which is typically highest only in reproductive males. However, all non...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Boonstra, Rudy, Mo, Kaiguo, Monks, Douglas Ashley
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.mt35d
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.mt35d
Description
Summary:Androgens have benefits, such as promoting muscle growth, but also significant costs, including suppression of immune function. In many species, these trade-offs in androgen action are reflected in regulated androgen production, which is typically highest only in reproductive males. However, all non-reproductive Arctic ground squirrels, irrespective of age and sex, have high levels of androgens prior to hibernating at sub-zero temperatures. Androgens appear to be required to make muscle in summer, which, together with lipid, is then catabolized during overwinter. By contrast, most hibernating mammals catabolize only lipid. We tested the hypothesis that androgen action is selectively enhanced in Arctic ground squirrel muscle because of an upregulation of androgen receptors (ARs). Using Western blot analysis, we found that Arctic ground squirrels have AR in skeletal muscle more than four times that of Columbian ground squirrels, a related southern species that overwinters at approximately 0°C and has low ... : AR.ags.cgs.trapping datatrapping data of the animals contributing contributing to the researchmonks.AR.Master.dataAndrogen receptor analysis that is the basis of the paper from the squirrels used ...