Germline proliferation trades off with lipid metabolism in Drosophila

Author:

Rodrigues Marisa A12,Dauphin-Villemant Chantal1,Paris Margot2ORCID,Kapun Martin1234ORCID,Mitchell Esra Durmaz125ORCID,Kerdaffrec Envel2,Flatt Thomas12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne , Lausanne , Switzerland

2. Department of Biology, University of Fribourg , Fribourg , Switzerland

3. Central Research Laboratories, Natural History Museum Vienna , Vienna , Austria

4. Division of Cell and Developmental Biology, Medical University of Vienna , Vienna , Austria

5. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Southern Denmark , Odense , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Little is known about the metabolic basis of life-history trade-offs but lipid stores seem to play a pivotal role. During reproduction, an energetically highly costly process, animals mobilize fat reserves. Conversely, reduced or curtailed reproduction promotes lipid storage in many animals. Systemic signals from the gonad seem to be involved: Caenorhabditis elegans lacking germline stem cells display endocrine changes, have increased fat stores and are long-lived. Similarly, germline-ablated Drosophila melanogaster exhibit major somatic physiological changes, but whether and how germline loss affects lipid metabolism remains largely unclear. Here we show that germline-ablated flies have profoundly altered energy metabolism at the transcriptional level and store excess fat as compared to fertile flies. Germline activity thus constrains or represses fat accumulation, and this effect is conserved between flies and worms. More broadly, our findings confirm that lipids represent a major energetic currency in which costs of reproduction are paid.

Funder

the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF grants

the Novartis Foundation for Medical-Biological Research

the DFG Collaborative Research Unit (RU) “Sociality and the Reversal of the Fecundity–Longevity Trade-off”

the Austrian Science Foundation

FWF grant

the European Molecular Biology Organization

EMBO long-term fellowship ALT

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference115 articles.

1. Lifespan extension by increased expression of the Drosophila homologue of the IGFBP7 tumour suppressor;Alic,2011

2. Regulation of life-span by germ-line stem cells in Caenorhabditis elegans;Arantes-Oliveira,2002

3. Diabetic larvae and obese flies—Emerging studies of metabolism in Drosophila;Baker,2007

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