Institute of Healthy Ageing, Department of Genetics, Evolution, and Environment, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Genet. 2010 Feb 26;6(2):e1000857. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000857.
Multicellular animals match costly activities, such as growth and reproduction, to the environment through nutrient-sensing pathways. The insulin/IGF signaling (IIS) pathway plays key roles in growth, metabolism, stress resistance, reproduction, and longevity in diverse organisms including mammals. Invertebrate genomes often contain multiple genes encoding insulin-like ligands, including seven Drosophila insulin-like peptides (DILPs). We investigated the evolution, diversification, redundancy, and functions of the DILPs, combining evolutionary analysis, based on the completed genome sequences of 12 Drosophila species, and functional analysis, based on newly-generated knock-out mutations for all 7 dilp genes in D. melanogaster. Diversification of the 7 DILPs preceded diversification of Drosophila species, with stable gene diversification and family membership, suggesting stabilising selection for gene function. Gene knock-outs demonstrated both synergy and compensation of expression between different DILPs, notably with DILP3 required for normal expression of DILPs 2 and 5 in brain neurosecretory cells and expression of DILP6 in the fat body compensating for loss of brain DILPs. Loss of DILP2 increased lifespan and loss of DILP6 reduced growth, while loss of DILP7 did not affect fertility, contrary to its proposed role as a Drosophila relaxin. Importantly, loss of DILPs produced in the brain greatly extended lifespan but only in the presence of the endosymbiontic bacterium Wolbachia, demonstrating a specific interaction between IIS and Wolbachia in lifespan regulation. Furthermore, loss of brain DILPs blocked the responses of lifespan and fecundity to dietary restriction (DR) and the DR response of these mutants suggests that IIS extends lifespan through mechanisms that both overlap with those of DR and through additional mechanisms that are independent of those at work in DR. Evolutionary conservation has thus been accompanied by synergy, redundancy, and functional differentiation between DILPs, and these features may themselves be of evolutionary advantage.
多细胞动物通过营养感应途径将生长和繁殖等昂贵的活动与环境相匹配。胰岛素/IGF 信号通路(IIS)在包括哺乳动物在内的多种生物的生长、代谢、抗应激、繁殖和长寿中发挥着关键作用。无脊椎动物基因组通常包含多个编码胰岛素样配体的基因,包括 7 种果蝇胰岛素样肽(DILP)。我们结合进化分析和功能分析,研究了 DILP 的进化、多样化、冗余和功能。进化分析基于 12 种果蝇完整基因组序列,功能分析基于 D. melanogaster 中所有 7 个 dilp 基因的新生成敲除突变。7 种 DILP 的多样化先于果蝇物种的多样化,基因多样化和家族成员稳定,表明基因功能存在稳定选择。基因敲除表明不同 DILP 之间的表达具有协同作用和补偿作用,尤其是 DILP3 在脑神经分泌细胞中对 DILP2 和 5 的正常表达以及 DILP6 在脂肪体中的表达对脑 DILP 的缺失具有补偿作用。DILP2 的缺失增加了寿命,DILP6 的缺失减少了生长,而 DILP7 的缺失并不影响生育力,这与它作为果蝇松弛素的作用相反。重要的是,脑内 DILP 的缺失大大延长了寿命,但只有在共生菌沃尔巴克氏体存在的情况下才会延长寿命,这表明 IIS 和沃尔巴克氏体在寿命调节中存在特定的相互作用。此外,脑 DILP 的缺失阻断了寿命和繁殖力对饮食限制(DR)的反应,并且这些突变体的 DR 反应表明 IIS 通过与 DR 重叠的机制以及通过 DR 中不起作用的其他机制来延长寿命。因此,进化保守性伴随着 DILP 之间的协同作用、冗余和功能分化,这些特征本身可能具有进化优势。