| Literature DB >> 34108216 |
Nirmalya Chatterjee1, Norbert Perrimon1,2.
Abstract
The organs and metabolic pathways involved in energy metabolism, and the process of ATP production from nutrients, are comparable between humans and Drosophila melanogaster This level of conservation, together with the power of Drosophila genetics, makes the fly a very useful model system to study energy homeostasis. Here, we discuss the major organs involved in energy metabolism in Drosophila and how they metabolize different dietary nutrients to generate adenosine triphosphate. Energy metabolism in these organs is controlled by cell-intrinsic, paracrine, and endocrine signals that are similar between Drosophila and mammals. We describe how these signaling pathways are regulated by several physiological and environmental cues to accommodate tissue-, age-, and environment-specific differences in energy demand. Last, we discuss several genetic and diet-induced fly models of obesity and diabetes that can be leveraged to better understand the molecular basis of these metabolic diseases and thereby promote the development of novel therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34108216 PMCID: PMC8189582 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abg4336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.957
Fig. 1Sugar-induced dILP secretion in Drosophila larvae and adults.
Adult Drosophila IPCs can sense sugar in the hemolymph but larval IPCs cannot. Thus, in larvae, sugar-induced AKH secretion from CC acts through AKHR and indirectly stimulates dILP3 secretion from larval IPCs. Daw, which is transcriptionally induced in the FB by sugar-activated Mondo-Mlx complex, binds the type I (Babo)/type II TGFβ receptor complex on larval IPCs, promoting dILP2 and dILP5 secretion. Likewise, CCHamide-2 (CCHa2), a peptide hormone secreted from the larval FB and midgut (not shown) in response to nutrients including sugar also promotes the expression and secretion of dILPs from IPCs. In contrast, IPCs in adult Drosophila respond to hemolymph glucose directly, through a mechanism analogous to the one described for mammalian pancreatic β cells. GLUT1-mediated glucose uptake in adult IPCs increases glucose catabolism and accompanying mitochondrial ATP production. This leads to the closure of ATP-sensitive potassium channels (KATP-Ch), membrane depolarization, the opening of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (Ca2+-Ch), an influx of Ca2+, and subsequent dILP secretion through exocytosis. HNF4, which is highly expressed in adult IPCs, is required for glucose-induced dILP secretion. The CN neuron, which projects to both adult IPCs and AKH-secreting CC with bifurcated axons, responds to hemolymph glucose in a similar fashion in adults. However, Ca2+ influx in these neurons triggers the release of sNPF that binds to sNPF receptors (sNPFR) on IPCs and promotes dILP2 secretion through a Gq-coupled signaling mechanism. This is accompanied by a suppression of AKH secretion from adult CC through an sNPFR/Gi/o-induced signaling cascade. Upd2 secreted from the FB in response to nutrients, including sugar, stimulates Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT) signaling in GABAergic neurons (GN) by binding to its receptor Dome and inhibits their firing in a STAT92E-dependent manner. This relieves their inhibitory effect on dILP secretion from both larval and adult IPCs.
Fig. 2Convergence of nutrient-sensitive IIS, AKH signaling, and Mondo/Mlx activity on the SIK3/HDAC4/dFOXO axis.
Feeding increases levels of sugar, which binds to and activates the Mondo/Mlx transcription factor complex. The Mondo/Mlx complex then binds to the carbohydrate response element (ChoRE) at the SIK3 promoter and induces SIK3 expression. Feeding also stimulates insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling (IIS), which leads to AKT activation downstream of the InR/Chico/PI3K cascade. AKT phosphorylates and activates SIK3, which, in turn, phosphorylates and inhibits HDAC4. Active HDAC4 removes inhibitory acetylation on dFOXO and thereby activates it. Thus, SIK3-mediated inhibition of HDAC4 in response to enhanced IIS inhibits dFOXO. In addition, AKT can directly phosphorylate dFOXO to inactivate it and reduce its nuclear localization. dFOXO-induced expression of bmm lipase and PEPCK leads to an increase in lipolysis and gluconeogenesis that eventually elevates sugar levels. Consequently, feeding-mediated IIS activation reduces lipolysis and gluconeogenesis by inhibiting dFOXO. In contrast, fasting stimulates glucagon-like AKH signaling, which leads to PKA activation and inhibition by PKA of SIK3. Moreover, AKH inhibits LKB1 and thereby prevents LKB1-mediated activation of SIK3. As a result, fasting-mediated activation of AKH signaling ultimately leads to dFOXO activation and a subsequent increase in lipolysis and gluconeogenesis.