Masek Pavel, Reynolds Lauren A, Bollinger Wesley L, Moody Catriona, Mehta Aradhana, Murakami Kazuma, Yoshizawa Masato, Gibbs Allen G, Keene Alex C
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno. Reno, NV, 89557, USA.
School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, 89154, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2014 Sep 1;217(Pt 17):3122-32. doi: 10.1242/jeb.103309. Epub 2014 Jun 19.
Animals respond to changes in food availability by adjusting sleep and foraging strategies to optimize their fitness. Wild populations of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, display highly variable levels of starvation resistance that are dependent on geographic location, food availability and evolutionary history. How behaviors that include sleep and feeding vary in Drosophila with increased starvation resistance is unclear. We have generated starvation-resistant flies through experimental evolution to investigate the relationship between foraging behaviors and starvation resistance. Outbred populations of D. melanogaster were selected for starvation resistance over 60 generations. This selection process resulted in flies with a threefold increase in total lipids that survive up to 18 days without food. We tested starvation-selected (S) flies for sleep and feeding behaviors to determine the effect that selection for starvation resistance has had on foraging behavior. Flies from three replicated starvation-selected populations displayed a dramatic reduction in feeding and prolonged sleep duration compared to fed control (F) populations, suggesting that modified sleep and feeding may contribute to starvation resistance. A prolonged larval developmental period contributes to the elevated energy stores present in starvation-selected flies. By preventing S larvae from feeding longer than F larvae, we were able to reduce energy stores in adult S flies to the levels seen in adult F flies, thus allowing us to control for energy storage levels. However, the reduction of energy stores in S flies fails to generate normal sleep and feeding behavior seen in F flies with similar energy stores. These findings suggest that the behavioral changes observed in S flies are due to genetic regulation of behavior rather than elevated lipid levels. Testing S-F hybrid individuals for both feeding and sleep revealed a lack of correlation between food consumption and sleep duration, indicating further independence in genetic factors underlying the sleep and feeding changes observed in S flies. Taken together, these findings provide evidence that starvation selection results in prolonged sleep and reduced feeding through a mechanism that is independent of elevated energy stores. These findings suggest that changes in both metabolic function and behavior contribute to the increase in starvation resistance seen in flies selected for starvation resistance.
动物通过调整睡眠和觅食策略来应对食物可利用性的变化,以优化自身的适应性。野生果蝇种群,即黑腹果蝇,表现出高度可变的饥饿抗性水平,这取决于地理位置、食物可利用性和进化历史。随着饥饿抗性增加,果蝇中包括睡眠和进食在内的行为如何变化尚不清楚。我们通过实验进化培育出了抗饥饿果蝇,以研究觅食行为与饥饿抗性之间的关系。对黑腹果蝇的远交群体进行了60代的抗饥饿选择。这一选择过程导致果蝇的总脂质增加了三倍,它们在没有食物的情况下能存活长达18天。我们测试了经饥饿选择的(S)果蝇的睡眠和进食行为,以确定抗饥饿选择对觅食行为的影响。与喂食对照(F)群体相比,来自三个重复的经饥饿选择群体的果蝇进食量大幅减少,睡眠时间延长,这表明睡眠和进食的改变可能有助于提高饥饿抗性。延长的幼虫发育期导致经饥饿选择的果蝇体内能量储备增加。通过阻止S幼虫比F幼虫进食更长时间,我们能够将成年S果蝇的能量储备降低到成年F果蝇的水平,从而使我们能够控制能量储备水平。然而,S果蝇能量储备的减少并未产生与能量储备相似的F果蝇所具有的正常睡眠和进食行为。这些发现表明,在S果蝇中观察到的行为变化是由于行为的基因调控,而非脂质水平升高。对S-F杂交个体的进食和睡眠进行测试发现,食物消耗与睡眠时间之间缺乏相关性,这表明在S果蝇中观察到的睡眠和进食变化背后的遗传因素进一步独立。综上所述,这些发现提供了证据,表明饥饿选择通过一种独立于能量储备升高的机制导致睡眠时间延长和进食减少。这些发现表明,代谢功能和行为的变化都有助于提高经抗饥饿选择的果蝇的饥饿抗性。