A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.

Stoichiometric homeostasis is the ability of an organism to keep its body chemical composition constant, despite varying inputs. Stoichiometric homeostasis therefore constrains the metabolic needs of consumers which in turn often feed on resources not matching these requirements. In a broader contex...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cédric L Meunier, Arne M Malzahn, Maarten Boersma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4172659?pdf=render
id doaj-11b26bcd747341f68d7a37e30ed93fe4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-11b26bcd747341f68d7a37e30ed93fe42020-11-24T21:50:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10773710.1371/journal.pone.0107737A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.Cédric L MeunierArne M MalzahnMaarten BoersmaStoichiometric homeostasis is the ability of an organism to keep its body chemical composition constant, despite varying inputs. Stoichiometric homeostasis therefore constrains the metabolic needs of consumers which in turn often feed on resources not matching these requirements. In a broader context, homeostasis also relates to the capacity of an organism to maintain other biological parameters (e.g. body temperature) at a constant level over ambient environmental variations. Unfortunately, there are discrepancies in the literature and ecological and physiological definitions of homeostasis are disparate and partly contradictory. Here, we address this matter by reviewing the existing knowledge considering two distinct groups, regulators and conformers and, based on examples of thermo- and osmoregulation, we propose a new approach to stoichiometric homeostasis, unifying ecological and physiological concepts. We suggest a simple and precise graphical way to identify regulators and conformers: for any given biological parameter (e.g. nutrient stoichiometry, temperature), a sigmoidal relation between internal and external conditions can be observed for conformers while an inverse sigmoidal response is characteristic of regulators. This new definition and method, based on well-studied physiological mechanisms, unifies ecological and physiological approaches and is a useful tool for understanding how organisms are affected by and affect their environment.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4172659?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cédric L Meunier
Arne M Malzahn
Maarten Boersma
spellingShingle Cédric L Meunier
Arne M Malzahn
Maarten Boersma
A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cédric L Meunier
Arne M Malzahn
Maarten Boersma
author_sort Cédric L Meunier
title A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
title_short A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
title_full A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
title_fullStr A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
title_full_unstemmed A new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
title_sort new approach to homeostatic regulation: towards a unified view of physiological and ecological concepts.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Stoichiometric homeostasis is the ability of an organism to keep its body chemical composition constant, despite varying inputs. Stoichiometric homeostasis therefore constrains the metabolic needs of consumers which in turn often feed on resources not matching these requirements. In a broader context, homeostasis also relates to the capacity of an organism to maintain other biological parameters (e.g. body temperature) at a constant level over ambient environmental variations. Unfortunately, there are discrepancies in the literature and ecological and physiological definitions of homeostasis are disparate and partly contradictory. Here, we address this matter by reviewing the existing knowledge considering two distinct groups, regulators and conformers and, based on examples of thermo- and osmoregulation, we propose a new approach to stoichiometric homeostasis, unifying ecological and physiological concepts. We suggest a simple and precise graphical way to identify regulators and conformers: for any given biological parameter (e.g. nutrient stoichiometry, temperature), a sigmoidal relation between internal and external conditions can be observed for conformers while an inverse sigmoidal response is characteristic of regulators. This new definition and method, based on well-studied physiological mechanisms, unifies ecological and physiological approaches and is a useful tool for understanding how organisms are affected by and affect their environment.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4172659?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT cedriclmeunier anewapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
AT arnemmalzahn anewapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
AT maartenboersma anewapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
AT cedriclmeunier newapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
AT arnemmalzahn newapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
AT maartenboersma newapproachtohomeostaticregulationtowardsaunifiedviewofphysiologicalandecologicalconcepts
_version_ 1725883884044812288