Introduction
The identification and characterization
of Drosophila melanogaster insulin-like peptides (DILPs) together
with accumulating insight into the nutrient sensing and intracellular signaling
mechanisms in the brain neurosecretory cells in which DILPs are produced is
revealing many important details of the neuroendocrine mechanisms that couple
nutrition to metabolic change [1]. These
recent discoveries not only advance our understanding of important
physiological mechanisms in the fruit fly, they also expand the role of this
model organism to include conserved molecular mechanisms of carbohydrate
homeostasis in animals. One concerning limitation common to most studies investigating
DILP action to date is that experiments have focused on developmentally
immature larval flies, which, in order to facilitate expedited growth and
development, exhibit physiologies that may differ significantly from the more
metabolically subdued adults.
As a major goal of this area of research is to gain insight into common
mechanisms that will aid our understanding of mammalian carbohydrate metabolism
perturbations, and as many major mammalian metabolic disorders are associated
with aging and senescing adults, confirmation of the continuity in homeostatic
function from larva to adult is critical in establishing Drosophila as
an appropriate model for such studies. In this Research Perspective, we
highlight recent work with adult flies that both illustrates the lifelong
employment of conserved regulatory mechanisms and demonstrates the value of the
adult fly as a relevant system in which to study carbohydrate homeostasis and
post-developmental onset of metabolic pathophysiologies in animals.
Neuroendocrine
messengers
TheDrosophila genome contains seven dilp genes, five of which
exhibit significant homology to mammalian insulins
[2,3]. dilps are expressed in a
variety of tissues including the larval ventral nerve cord, larval salivary
glands, larval midgut, ovaries, and the larval and adult brain [2-4]. Most studies investigating the
function of these peptide hormones have focused on DILPs 2, 3, and 5, which are
all co-expressed in 5-7 pairs of bilaterally symmetrical, clustered median
neurosecretory cells in the pars intercerebralis (PI) region of the
protocerebrum in both larvae and adults (Figure 1A and B) [2-5]. The PI region, in conjunction
with the corpus cardiacum/corpus allatum (CC/CA) tissue complex of the insect
brain forms a major component of the neuroendocrine system in the fly
analogous to the vertebrate hypothalamus-pituitary axis in both anatomical
arrangement and as a master neuroendocrine organ, with embryological evidence
suggesting homology [6]. Axonal processes originating from DILP-producing
median neurosecretory cells (IPCs) in the PI terminate in neurohemal areas of
the aorta and CC tissue-containing ring gland in larvae and presumably the CC
portion of the retrocerebral complex in adults, thus providing a route for
DILPS to be released directly into the circulatory system [3,4].
Figure 1. Adult Drosophila IPCs modulate metabolism, stress response, fecundity and longevity. A diagram (A) and fluorescent
micrograph (B) of adult DILP producing cells (IPCs) in the pars
intercerebralis region of the Drosophila brain. The
visualization of adult IPCs was achieved via GFP expression in dilp2-Gal4/UAS-GFP
flies [11].
C.
A summary of physiological and behavioral effects of adult-specific partial
IPC ablation. Scale bar, 100 μm.
Larval
action
Insulin/Insulin-like
growth factor signaling (IIS) has been implicated in the regulation of growth,
development, metabolism and aging in metazoans [5]. The
expression of dilps2,3, and 5 are independently regulated in
larval IPCs and the expression of dilps 3 and 5 is regulated by
nutrient availability, with starvation reducing the levels of detectable
transcripts and leading to peptide accumulation in IPCs and axonal termini [4,7].
Constitutive transgenic ablation of IPCs in Drosophila larvae results in
growth and developmental impairment, reduced survivorship, and a hyperglycemic
phenotype with circulating hemolymph sugar levels 38% above normal [3]. The effect
of elevated circulating sugar levels following IPC ablation in immature flies
is reminiscent of a mammalian diabetic phenotype and supports the conserved
role of DILPs in carbohydrate homeostasis. Similarly, the effects of life-long
constitutive IPC ablation that so radically affects larval physiology manifests
in adults as an extension in median and maximum lifespan in both male and
female flies, a decrease in egg laying in both mated and virgin female flies,
and an increase in oxidative and starvation stress resistance [5].
Additionally, adult female flies that have experienced attenuated insulin
signaling throughout development exhibit elevated hemolymph glucose titers
(two-fold increase) as well as elevated levels of whole body trehalose,
glycogen, and lipids [5]. It is
quite clear that reduced insulin signaling experienced throughout development
alters normal carbohydrate metabolism and nutrient assimilation, but it has so
far been unclear if the effects observed in the adult are due to ongoing
processes or to altered development.
The conservation of regulatory endocrine
mechanisms controlling circulating glucose levels in Drosophila larvae
is further evidenced by the presence of cells in the corpus cardiacum that
produce and secrete adipokinetic hormone (AKH), which functions in glucose
homeostasis by mobilizing stored energy reserves and raising circulating
carbohydrate levels [8]. The
antagonistic relationship between DILPs and AKH is functionally analogous to that recorded between insulin and glucagon
in mammals. AKH-producing CC cells respond to hypoglycemia with increased
intracellular calcium levels, a key step in the signaling cascade that leads to
exocytosis of AKH [9]. Hypoglycemic sensing and subsequent exocytosis
of AKH in CC cells closely mirrors the function and behavior of mammalian islet
α-cells. Interestingly, flies
with ablated AKH-producing CC cells develop and reproduce normally, implying
that unlike DILPs, AKH signaling is not essential under normal growth
conditions [8].
Adult
action
While
a great deal of evidence gathered from the study of Drosophila larvae
points to the conservation of fundamental endocrine regulatory mechanisms of
homeostatic blood sugar levels in insects [8], the larval
stage of a holometabolous insect is a unique period dedicated to prodigious
nutrient acquisition and rapid growth. It is therefore possible that Drosophila
larvae may possess unique metabolic specializations that are not present in
adult flies, which have switched over from a growth phase to a largely
post-mitotic, reproductive phase. Evidence for the maintenance of conserved
glucose homeostatic mechanisms throughout the Drosophila life cycle is
accumulating, however, and we report that conditional, adult specific partial
IPC ablation yielded a phenotype similar to that seen in larvae experiencing
constitutive IPC ablation (Figure 1C) [10]. When subjected to an oral glucose
tolerance test, we found that conditionally IPC-ablated adult "knock down" (IPC
KD) flies exhibited fasting hyperglycemia and impaired glucose tolerance, yet
remained insulin sensitive as measured by peripheral
glucose clearance upon insulin injection and serine phosphorylation of a key
IIS pathway molecule, Akt [10]. In addition, a moderate increase in
median and maximum lifespan, heightened starvation resistance, and reduced
early life fecundity are measured as the result of adult-specific, partial IPC
ablation. Thus, these results have confirmed a role of adult IPCs in
controlling glucose homeostasis, reproduction, and longevity.
IPC
glucose sensing mechanisms also appear to be similar to that of mammalian
β-pancreatic cells. Adult Drosophila IPCs expressing the fluorescent
Ca2+ indicator "camgaroo" (Cg-2) show an increase in fluorescence
when exposed to glucose and trehalose, demonstrating that these cells increase
their intracellular Ca2+ concentration in response to the presence
of circulating nutrients [11]. Ca2+
influx triggered by the opening of the voltage gated Ca2+ channels
as the result of closing of the ATP-sensitive KATP channels is the
critical event in insulin release in mammalian β cells [12]. Thus, the
mechanism controlling DILPs release from adult IPCs appears conserved. In
supporting this notion, we have reported the detection of transcripts of the
sulfonylurea receptor (Sur) functional subunit of KATP channels in
IPCs via in situ hybridization [11].
Conclusion
The
tissue level organization of the glucose regulatory system in Drosophila
is not only analogous to the mammalian islet cell endocrine system [13], but the
nutrient sensing and intracellular signaling mechanisms appear to be
homologous. This conserved arrangement of neuroendocrine cells and tissues
initially documented in larval flies seemingly survives the dramatic
histological rearrangements experienced during insect metamorphosis and
continues to monitor and control hemolymph glucose titers in adult flies. Our
recent studies have begun to tease apart key metabolic responses needed to
maintain glucose homeostasis in the adult fly, thus establishing the adult fly
as an appropriate model for the investigation of adult-specific mechanisms in
normal and altered carbohydrate homeostasis.
This work was supported by grants from the NIA/NIH to
Y-W.C.F (AG21068, AG31086).