| Literature DB >> 20739318 |
Stuart Wigby1, Cathy Slack, Sebastian Grönke, Pedro Martinez, Federico C F Calboli, Tracey Chapman, Linda Partridge.
Abstract
Mating rate is a major determinant of female lifespan and fitness, and is predicted to optimize at an intermediate level, beyond which superfluous matings are costly. In female Drosophila melanogaster, nutrition is a key regulator of mating rate but the underlying mechanism is unknown. The evolutionarily conserved insulin/insulin-like growth factor-like signalling (IIS) pathway is responsive to nutrition, and regulates development, metabolism, stress resistance, fecundity and lifespan. Here we show that inhibition of IIS, by ablation of Drosophila insulin-like peptide (DILP)-producing median neurosecretory cells, knockout of dilp2, dilp3 or dilp5 genes, expression of a dominant-negative DILP-receptor (InR) transgene or knockout of Lnk, results in reduced female remating rates. IIS-mediated regulation of female remating can occur independent of virgin receptivity, developmental defects, reduced body size or fecundity, and the receipt of the female receptivity-inhibiting male sex peptide. Our results provide a likely mechanism by which females match remating rates to the perceived nutritional environment. The findings suggest that longevity-mediating genes could often have pleiotropic effects on remating rate. However, overexpression of the IIS-regulated transcription factor dFOXO in the fat body-which extends lifespan-does not affect remating rate. Thus, long life and reduced remating are not obligatorily coupled.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20739318 PMCID: PMC3013413 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.1390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Figure 1.Remating frequency of IIS mutant and control females. The percentage of females remating within 1 or 2 h (±s.e.), 24 h after mating to wild-type males, is shown. Where experiments were replicated, or where independent replicate knockout lines were used (see electronic supplementary material, table S1), the mean value (±s.e) of replicate experiments/lines is shown. *p < 0.05 compared with controls; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; n.s., non-significant. (a) MNC-ablated females (UAS-rpr/dilp2-GAL4, dark grey bar) and controls (dilp2-GAL4/+, light grey bar; UAS-rpr/+, white bar). (b) dilp2–3, dilp2, dilp3 and dilp5 knockouts (dark grey bars) and controls (white bars). Dashes separate different experiments. (c) Females constitutively expressing a dominant-negative InR (UAS-InRDN/daGAL4, dark grey bar) and controls (UAS-InRDN/+, light grey bar; daGAL4/+, white bar). (d) Females expressing the UAS-InRDN transgene at the onset of adulthood (by expression of the GS255A GeneSwitch driver induced with RU486) and controls (UAS-InRDN/GS255A females without RU486 (dark grey bars) and GS255A/+ females with and without RU486 (white bars)). (e) Lnk mutant females (Lnk, dark grey bar) and controls (Lnk/+, light grey bar; +/+, white bar). (f) Females in which dFOXO was overexpressed in the adult fat body and controls. Expression was induced using RU486 to turn on a fat-body-specific GAL4 driver (S, dark grey bar). Control flies of the same genotype were maintained on RU486− food.
Figure 2.Female remating rate 5 h after mating to SP0 males. Where experiments were replicated (see electronic supplementary material, table S1) mean values of replicates (±s.e.) are shown. **p < 0.01 compared with controls; ***p < 0.001; n.s., non-significant. (a) dilp2–3, dilp2 and dilp3 females (dark grey bars), and controls (light grey bars). (b) Females with ablated MNCs (UAS-rpr/dilp2-GAL4, dark grey bar) and controls (dilp2-GAL4/+, light grey bar; UAS-rpr/+, white bar).