E. Nix’s research while affiliated with University of Victoria and other places

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Publications (1)


Fig.1
External view of the perineal region of an adult male (A) and adult female (B). Field of view approx. 7.5 cm 9cm. U, urethral opening; R, oval ridge; PE, perineal pocket; A, anus; P, penis (retracted); V, vaginal closure membrane. The female has recently given birth and her vaginal closure membrane is incompletely resealed.
Fig.2
Scanning electron microscope views of perineal pocket hair from adult female (A) and control hair from exposed perineum of same (B). Bars = 25m.
Fig.3
Ten micrometre section of perineum of 6.5kg adult male showing large pilosebaceous units taking up most of the dermis. P, piliary canal; S, sebaceous gland.
Fig.4
Microdissections. (A) A large pilosebaceous unit. (B) Small pilosebaceous units, which fit between the larger variety. Sudan IV stain. H, large hair; h, fine hair; E, epidermis; S, sebaceous gland.
Fig.5
DGGE profiles of the amplified 16S rDNA fragments of the bacterial communities recovered from the porcupine perineal pockets. Lanes 1, 2, and 3 are 16S rDNA reference fragments of Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis, and Staphylococcus epidermidis, respectively. Lanes 415 represent animals B(), 5271(+), 412(), 510a(), 53(+), 922(), 510b(+), 75a(+), 5253(+), 510d(), 510c(), F(), and 75b(+), respectively (+, active secretory phase; , inactive secretory phase). Bands AK represent some of the major bacterial phylotypes of the perineal bacterial samples.

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Microanatomy and bacterial flora of the perineal glands of the North American porcupine
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December 2009

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10 Citations

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E. Nix

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D. M. Chapman

The perineal glands of the porcupine, Erethizon dorsatum (L., 1758), are sexually dimorphic, paired pockets sprouting osmetrichial hairs. They lie between the anus and urethra, lateral to the midline, amid a sebaceous glandular expanse. In their active state, the glandular pockets secrete an amber substance with a terpenoid odor. When inactive, the glands produce no stain or odor. In males, activation of the glands is associated with fully descended testes. The glandular pockets yield a microbiota (microflora) in both their active and inactive states. We hypothesize that the active-state microflora transforms a sebaceous secretion into a pheromonally active product that is disseminated by anal dragging. The glandular microflora was characterized by gas chromatography of bacterial fatty acid methyl esters (GC-FAME) and polymerase chain reaction denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) of 16S ribosomal RNA gene fragments of bacteria. PCR-DGGE results showed the resulting bacteria profiles were the same in both sexes, but differed between the active and inactive states. Active-state microfloras were dominated by members of the Actinobacteria and showed greater coefficients of similarity than inactive-state microfloras. The microflora of individual animals changed with time and with secretory state. We argue for a reproductive role for the activated perineal glands.

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Citations (1)


... are not typically found in anal gland secretions (with the exception of European badgers 30 ), they can ferment sugars to produce lactate, acetate, or ethanol; the latter two which are anal gland volatile compounds 98 . Lactic acid (the nonaqueous form of lactate) is detected in the perineal glands of North American porcupines 89 and tarsal glands of white-tailed deer 99 . Furthermore, in the harlequin ladybird beetle, Lactobacillus spp. ...

Reference:

Characterization of the microbiome and volatile compounds in anal gland secretions from domestic cats (Felis catus) using metagenomics and metabolomics
Microanatomy and bacterial flora of the perineal glands of the North American porcupine