Dear all,

On the behalf of my co-authors, I would like to announce our new
publication on grey seal pup saliva use for steroid analysis:

V. Survilienė, O. Rukšėnas, P.P. Pomeroy, S.E.W. Moss and K.A. Bennett.
2022. Evaluating suitability of saliva to measure steroid concentrations in
grey seal pups. General and Comparative Endocrinology, Volume 326, 114070,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ygcen.2022.114070.

You can find this article using a 50-day free access link:
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1fD0u3oGhS0K%7E

If you miss a cut-off date for free access, please feel free to contact me
by email ([email protected]), twitter (@SurvilieneVaida) or a
researchgate.

Abstract

Measurement of steroids in wild pinnipeds can facilitate assessment of
breeding, nutritional and stress status, and is useful in understanding
behavioral responses. Even in young animals, sex steroids may be important
in behavioral interactions and immune modulation. Use of saliva can avoid
the large fluctuations seen in some steroids in plasma, and can negate the
need for venipuncture, making it a potentially useful matrix in the
wildlife. However, its utility in estimating steroid levels in wild young
pinnipeds has not been evaluated. Here, we investigated the suitability of
saliva for steroid hormone analysis in wild grey seal pups during their
suckling and post-weaning fast periods. We collected saliva (n = 38) and
plasma (n = 71) samples during the breeding season on the Isle of May,
Scotland, 2012. We investigated the success of sample collection, ease of
preparation, accuracy and precision of analysis, and, where possible,
comparability of measurements (n = 27) from saliva and plasma. Plasma
sampling was rapid, whereas sampling saliva took up to five times longer.
Analytical performance criteria (parallelism, accuracy, and precision
(intra and inter assay coefficient of variation (% CV)) of commercial ELISA
kits to measure estradiol, testosterone and cortisol in both matrices were
assessed. Estradiol and cortisol assays performed well and can be used in
plasma and saliva. However, we could not confidently validate testosterone
for either matrix. Saliva estradiol correlated with levels in plasma.
Saliva sample preparation was faster and simpler than plasma preparation
because it did not require extraction. However, given the additional time
taken to obtain saliva in the wild, the possibility of blood contamination
from oral damage and the lower success rate in obtaining sufficient sample
for analysis, we recommend that this matrix only be used as an alternative
to plasma sampling measurement in pinnipeds when animals are anaesthetized,
tolerate mouth swabbing, or have been trained to accept saliva sampling in
captivity.

All the best,
Vaida


Pagarbiai/ Regards,

Vaida Survilienė
Mob.: + 370 66211047
PhD Student/Junior research fellow
Institute of Biosciences
Life Sciences Center
Vilnius University
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to