nation as manifested in ground squirrels is arguably the most plastic and extreme of physiological phenotypes in mammals. Homeostasis is challenged by prolonged fasting accompanied by heterothermy, yet must be facilitated for survival. We performed LC and GC-MS metabolomic profiling of plasma samples taken reproducibly during seven natural stages of the hibernator's year, three in summer and four in winter (each n Ն 5), employing a nontargeted approach to define the metabolite shifts associated with the phenotype. We quantified 231 named metabolites; 106 of these altered significantly, demarcating a cycle within a cycle where torpor-arousal cycles recur during the winter portion of the seasonal cycle. A number of robust hibernation biomarkers that alter with season and winter stage are identified, including specific free fatty acids, antioxidants, and previously unpublished modified amino acids that are likely to be associated with the fasting state. The major pattern in metabolite levels is one of either depletion or accrual during torpor, followed by reversal to an apparent homeostatic level by interbout arousal. This finding provides new data that strongly support the predictions of a long-standing hypothesis that periodic arousals are necessary to restore metabolic homeostasis.
Ictidomys tridecemlineatus; Spermophilus; ␥-glutamyl; biliverdin; NacetylA YEAR IN THE LIFE OF A HIBERNATOR begins with reproduction in spring, followed by growth in summer, and then massive storage of fat as fall approaches. Hibernation, characterized by months of fasting and dramatic oscillations between states of cold and warm body temperature (T b ), ensues only after adequate fat stores are deposited (7). Most of the fall and winter months are spent in a state of deep torpor in which metabolic, heart, and respiratory rates are reduced to Ͻ5% of their summer equivalents, and body temperature declines to as low as 0°C, or even below (5). However, all hibernating mammals spontaneously reverse torpor at regular intervals by elevating metabolic rate and employing strictly endogenous mechanisms of heat production including shivering and nonshivering thermogenesis. In the thirteen-lined ground squirrel, Ictidomys tridecemlineatus, elevated metabolic rate and T b (ϳ37°C) are maintained in each interbout arousal for ϳ10 -12 h before dropping again to initiate the next ϳ2 wk bout of torpor. Thus, the circannual hibernation rhythm can be viewed as a cycle between summer homeothermy and winter heterothermy, the latter of which is itself a cycle between torpor and arousal (see Fig. 1). These dramatic physiological shifts of hibernation have been postulated to result from intrinsic metabolic cycles (41) that may be revealed by metabolic profiling (42).Previous work to measure metabolite changes in hibernators documents a number of alterations in liver (2, 32, 36), brain (21, 40), brown adipose tissue (13), bile (4), and blood (1, 9, 24, 31) that begin to assess the metabolites cycling in association with hibernation. These data suggest a two-s...