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Postnatal ecdysis establishes the permeability barrier in snake skin

Nanci

Alien Lover
link This is a really cool study!!

A competent barrier to transepidermal water loss (TEWL) is essential for terrestrial life. In various vertebrates, epidermal water barriers composed of lipids prevent excessive TEWL, which varies inversely with habitat aridity. Little is known, however, about the mechanisms and regulation of permeability relative to natal transition from the `aqueous' environments of gestation to the `aerial' environments of terrestrial neonates. We investigated newly hatched California king snakes Lampropeltis getula to test the hypothesis that the first ecdysis is important for establishing the barrier to TEWL. We found that skin resistance to TEWL increases twofold following the first postnatal ecdysis, corresponding with a roughly twofold increase in thickness and deposition of lamellar lipids in the mesos layer, the site of the skin permeability barrier in snakes. In addition, novel observations on lipid inclusions within the alpha layer of epidermis suggest that this layer has functional similarities with avian epidermis. It appears that emergence of the integument from embryonic fluids, and its subsequent pan-body replacement following contact with air, are essential for completion of barrier competence in the newborn. These conditions provide a potentially useful model for investigations on the mechanism of barrier formation. We also found that hatchling snakes are transiently endothermic, with skin temperatures elevated by approximately 0.6°C above ambient air temperature during the period of barrier formation. Behaviourally, hatchlings showed a higher tendency to seek humid microenvironments before the first ecdysis than after. The degree of water movement across the integument might explain the switch from reclusive to dispersive behaviours associated with postnatal ecdysis in snakes.
 
There are lots of implications here.
Many discussions.

The first I think of is, there would be an optimum "first year" for hatchlings. At least an optimum "first six months". In that, proper humidity (over time) is as important as proper temperature and proper yolk absorption and then proper feeding routine.
I would suspect, in the wild, non-optimal events are often involved in high first year mortality. (I don't mean to state the obvious here.)

Note, I think transient scientific observation of evolutionary remnant evidence of endothermia is becoming not uncommon. For example in crocodilians. I seem to remember other studies involving rattlesnakes at high altitudes. Maybe. Certainly thermoregulation. Passively (metabolically/genetically--as in the above article),...if not behaviourally.
 
I've often thought that there were some pretty unique properties of that very first skin that snakes will shed.
 
Fascinating stuff. I deal with TEWL and skin barrier all the time at my work, but that's with human skin. Pretty cool to see it discussed in snakes!
 
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