scholarly journals Costs of cold acclimation on survival and reproductive behavior in Drosophila melanogaster

PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. e0197822 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth R. Everman ◽  
Jennifer L. Delzeit ◽  
F. Kate Hunter ◽  
Jennifer M. Gleason ◽  
Theodore J. Morgan
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oskar Knittelfelder ◽  
Elodie Prince ◽  
Susanne Sales ◽  
Eric Fritzsche ◽  
Thomas Wöhner ◽  
...  

AbstractDuring cold acclimation fruit flies switch their feeding from yeast to plant food, however there are no robust markers to monitor it in the wild. Drosophila melanogaster is a sterol auxotroph and relies on dietary sterols to produce lipid membranes, lipoproteins and molting hormones. We employed shotgun lipidomics to quantify eight major food sterols in total extracts of heads, female and male genital tracts of adult flies. We found that their sterol composition is dynamic and reflective of flies diet in an organ-specific manner. Season-dependent changes observed in the organs of wild-living flies suggested that the molar ratio between yeast (ergosterol, zymosterol) and plant (sitosterol, stigmasterol) sterols is a quantifiable, generic and unequivocal marker of their feeding behavior, including cold acclimation. It provides technically simpler and more contrast readout compared to the full lipidome analysis and is suitable for ecological and environmental population-based studies.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. e25025 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimír Koštál ◽  
Jaroslava Korbelová ◽  
Jan Rozsypal ◽  
Helena Zahradníčková ◽  
Jana Cimlová ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 308 (10) ◽  
pp. R823-R831 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heath A. MacMillan ◽  
Jonas L. Andersen ◽  
Volker Loeschcke ◽  
Johannes Overgaard

Many insects, including the model holometabolous insect Drosophila melanogaster, display remarkable plasticity in chill tolerance in response to the thermal environment experienced during development or as adults. At low temperatures, many insects lose the ability to regulate Na+ balance, which is suggested to cause a secondary loss of hemolymph water to the tissues and gut lumen that concentrates the K+ remaining in the hemolymph. The resultant increase in extracellular [K+] inhibits neuromuscular excitability and is proposed to cause cellular apoptosis and injury. The present study investigates whether and how variation in chill tolerance induced through developmental and adult cold acclimation is associated with changes in Na+, water, and K+ balance. Developmental and adult cold acclimation improved the chilling tolerance of D. melanogaster in an additive manner. In agreement with the proposed model, these effects were intimately related to differences in Na+ distribution prior to cold exposure, such that chill-tolerant flies had low hemolymph [Na+], while intracellular [Na+] was similar among treatment groups. The low hemolymph Na+ of cold-acclimated flies allowed them to maintain hemolymph volume, prevent hyperkalemia, and avoid injury following chronic cold exposure. These findings extend earlier observations of hemolymph volume disruption during cold exposure to the most ubiquitous model insect ( D. melanogaster), highlight shared mechanisms of developmental and adult thermal plasticity and provide strong support for ionoregulatory failure as a central mechanism of insect chill susceptibility.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Ananda Bougleux Gomes ◽  
Justin R. DiAngelo ◽  
Nicholas Santangelo

AbstractNutrient storage and metabolism effects on reproductive behavior are well studied in higher vertebrates like mammals, but are less understood in simpler systems. Drosophila melanogaster is well suited to study the ramifications of diet and metabolic energy storage on reproductive behaviors as they are commonly used to explore energy mobilization pathways. We tested, for the first time, courtship of the naturally occurring adipose (adp60) mutant which over-accumulates triglycerides and glycogen on a normal diet. We also fed wild type (WT) flies either a normal diet, high fat diet or food deprived them before measuring courtship, copulations, and glycogen and triglyceride levels. Adipose mutants decreased both courtship and copulation frequency, yet showed the highest glycogen and triglyceride levels. We suggest the adp60 physique and/or an altered ability to utilize mobilize energy explains these effects. Food deprived WT flies had the lowest glycogen and triglycerides but exhibited shortened courtship latencies with increased courtship behaviors. This may be due to a decreased lifespan of food deprived flies leading to a greater reproductive drive. However, high fat fed flies copulated more frequently and had the highest triglycerides among WT groups, yet equal glycogen levels to the normal fed WT group. Thus, a high fat diet either increases male attractivity or male courtship persistence. Taken together, available diet and nutrient storage affects male fly reproductive behavior in a unique manner, which may be explained by their natural history, and provides a paradigm for understanding energetics based on reproductive potential.


2017 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 291-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth R. Everman ◽  
Nicholus Ledbetter ◽  
Theodore J. Morgan

Genetics ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 773-785
Author(s):  
D A Gailey ◽  
J C Hall

Abstract The fruitless (fru) courtship mutant was dissected into three defects of male reproductive behavior, which were separable as to their genetic etiologies by application of existing and newly induced chromosomal aberrations. fru itself is a small inversion [In(3R) 90C; 91B] on genetic and cytological criteria. Uncovering the fru distal breakpoint with deletions usually led to males with two of the fru courtship abnormalities: no copulation attempts with females (hence, behavioral sterility) and vigorous courtship among males, including the formation of "courtship chains." However, certain genetic changes involving region 91B resulted in males who formed courtship chains but who mated with females. Uncovering the fru proximal breakpoint led to males that passively elicit inappropriately high levels of courtship. This elicitation property was separable genetically from the sterility and chain formation phenotypes and provisionally mapped to the interval 89F-90F, which includes the fru proximal breakpoint. Behavioral sterility and chaining were also observed in males expressing certain abnormal genotypes, independent of the fru inversion. These included combinations of deficiencies, each with a breakpoint in 91B, and a transposon inserted in 91B.


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