Garcia Anastacia M, Ladage Mary L, Dumesnil Dennis R, Zaman Khadiza, Shulaev Vladimir, Azad Rajeev K, Padilla Pamela A
Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas 76203.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas 76203 Department of Mathematics, University of North Texas, Denton Texas 76203
Genetics. 2015 May;200(1):167-84. doi: 10.1534/genetics.115.174631. Epub 2015 Mar 10.
Diet is a central environmental factor that contributes to the phenotype and physiology of individuals. At the root of many human health issues is the excess of calorie intake relative to calorie expenditure. For example, the increasing amount of dietary sugars in the human diet is contributing to the rise of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Individuals with obesity and type 2 diabetes have compromised oxygen delivery, and thus it is of interest to investigate the impact a high-sugar diet has on oxygen deprivation responses. By utilizing the Caenorhabditis elegans genetic model system, which is anoxia tolerant, we determined that a glucose-supplemented diet negatively impacts responses to anoxia and that the insulin-like signaling pathway, through fatty acid and ceramide synthesis, modulates anoxia survival. Additionally, a glucose-supplemented diet alters lipid localization and initiates a positive chemotaxis response. Use of RNA-sequencing analysis to compare gene expression responses in animals fed either a standard or glucose-supplemented diet revealed that glucose impacts the expression of genes involved with multiple cellular processes including lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, stress responses, cell division, and extracellular functions. Several of the genes we identified show homology to human genes that are differentially regulated in response to obesity or type 2 diabetes, suggesting that there may be conserved gene expression responses between C. elegans fed a glucose-supplemented diet and a diabetic and/or obesity state observed in humans. These findings support the utility of the C. elegans model for understanding the molecular mechanisms regulating dietary-induced metabolic diseases.
饮食是影响个体表型和生理机能的核心环境因素。许多人类健康问题的根源在于卡路里摄入量相对于消耗量过多。例如,人类饮食中膳食糖含量的增加导致了肥胖症和2型糖尿病发病率的上升。肥胖症和2型糖尿病患者的氧气输送能力受损,因此,研究高糖饮食对缺氧反应的影响具有重要意义。通过利用耐缺氧的秀丽隐杆线虫遗传模型系统,我们确定补充葡萄糖的饮食会对缺氧反应产生负面影响,并且胰岛素样信号通路通过脂肪酸和神经酰胺的合成来调节缺氧生存能力。此外,补充葡萄糖的饮食会改变脂质定位并引发正向趋化反应。使用RNA测序分析来比较喂食标准饮食或补充葡萄糖饮食的动物的基因表达反应,结果表明葡萄糖会影响与多种细胞过程相关的基因表达,这些过程包括脂质和碳水化合物代谢、应激反应、细胞分裂以及细胞外功能。我们鉴定出的几个基因与在人类肥胖症或2型糖尿病中差异调节的人类基因具有同源性,这表明在喂食补充葡萄糖饮食的秀丽隐杆线虫与人类观察到的糖尿病和/或肥胖状态之间可能存在保守的基因表达反应。这些发现支持了秀丽隐杆线虫模型在理解调节饮食诱导的代谢疾病分子机制方面的实用性。