Diabetes, Diet, and Doves: Birds As a Negative Model for Hyperglycemic Complications
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Description
Birds have the highest blood glucose concentrations of all vertebrates. Meanwhile, birds do not develop the same physiological complications (e.g., increased oxidative stress and glycation) that mammals do when blood glucose is elevated (i.e., diabetes). Therefore, birds may serve as a negative model animal for hyperglycemic complications. The physiological reason for high blood glucose in birds remains largely unknown although several unique characteristics of birds may contribute including a lack of the insulin responsive glucose transport protein, relatively high glucagon concentrations, as well as reliance on fatty acids to sustain the high energetic demands of flight. In breaking down triglycerides for energy, glycerol is liberated, which can be converted to glucose through a process called gluconeogenesis. In addition, the extent to which birds maintain homeostatic control over blood glucose in response to extreme dietary interventions remains unclear and few dietary studies have been conducted in wild-caught birds. Using Mourning Doves (Zenaida macroura) as a model organism, this dissertation tests four hypotheses: 1) Gluconeogenesis contributes to high circulating blood glucose concentration; 2-4) similar to mammals, a fully refined carbohydrate (i.e., white bread diet); a high saturated fat diet (60% kcal from fat); and an urban-type diet comprised of a 1:1 ratio of French fries and birds seed will increase blood glucose compared to a nutritionally-balanced diet after a four-week duration. Contrary to the hypothesis, 150 mg/kg Metformin (which inhibits glycerol gluconeogenesis) increased blood glucose, but 300 mg/kg resulted in no change. However, when 2.5 mg/kg of 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-D-arabinitol (DAB; a glycogenolysis inhibitor) was given with 150 mg/kg of Metformin, blood glucose was not different from the control (50 ul water). This suggests that glycerol gluconeogenesis does not contribute to the naturally high blood glucose in birds and that a low dose of Metformin may increase the rate of glycogenolysis. In addition, all three experimental diets failed to alter blood glucose compared to control diets. Collectively, these results suggest that, in addition to a negative model for diabetes complications, birds can also serve a negative model for diet-induced hyperglycemia. Future research should further examine dietary manipulation in birds while controlling for and examining different variables (e.g., species, sex, duration, diet composition, urbanization).