McCue Marshall D, Guzman R Marena, Passement Celeste A, Davidowitz Goggy
St. Mary's University, Department of Biological Sciences, San Antonio, Texas, United States of America.
University of Arizona, Department of Entomology, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 14;10(10):e0140053. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140053. eCollection 2015.
Most of our understanding about the physiology of fasting and starvation comes from studies of vertebrates; however, for ethical reasons, studies that monitor vertebrates through the lethal endpoint are scant. Insects are convenient models to characterize the comparative strategies used to cope with starvation because they have diverse life histories and have evolved under the omnipresent challenge of food limitation. Moreover, we can study the physiology of starvation through its natural endpoint. In this study we raised populations of five species of insects (adult grasshoppers, crickets, cockroaches, and larval beetles and moths) on diets labeled with either 13C-palmitic acid or 13C-leucine to isotopically enrich the lipids or the proteins in their bodies, respectively. The insects were allowed to become postabsorptive and then starved. We periodically measured the δ13C of the exhaled breath to characterize how each species adjusted their reliance on endogenous lipids and proteins as energy sources. We found that starving insects employ a wide range of strategies for regulating lipid and protein oxidation. All of the insects except for the beetle larvae were capable of sharply reducing reliance on protein oxidation; however, this protein sparing strategy was usually unsustainable during the entire starvation period. All insects increased their reliance on lipid oxidation, but while some species (grasshoppers, cockroaches, and beetle larvae) were still relying extensively on lipids at the time of death, other species (crickets and moth larvae) allowed rates of lipid oxidation to return to prestarvation levels. Although lipids and proteins are critical metabolic fuels for both vertebrates and insects, insects apparently exhibit a much wider range of strategies for rationing these limited resources during starvation.
我们对禁食和饥饿生理机制的大部分理解都来自对脊椎动物的研究;然而,出于伦理原因,通过致死终点监测脊椎动物的研究很少。昆虫是表征应对饥饿所采用的比较策略的便捷模型,因为它们具有多样的生活史,并且在食物限制这一普遍存在的挑战下进化而来。此外,我们可以通过自然终点来研究饥饿的生理机制。在这项研究中,我们用标记有13C-棕榈酸或13C-亮氨酸的饲料饲养了五种昆虫(成年蚱蜢、蟋蟀、蟑螂以及甲虫和蛾的幼虫),以便分别使它们体内的脂质或蛋白质同位素富集。让昆虫进入吸收后状态,然后使其饥饿。我们定期测量呼出气体的δ13C,以表征每个物种如何调整其对作为能量来源的内源性脂质和蛋白质的依赖。我们发现,饥饿的昆虫采用多种策略来调节脂质和蛋白质氧化。除了甲虫幼虫外,所有昆虫都能够大幅降低对蛋白质氧化的依赖;然而,这种节省蛋白质的策略在整个饥饿期通常是不可持续的。所有昆虫都增加了对脂质氧化的依赖,但虽然一些物种(蚱蜢、蟑螂和甲虫幼虫)在死亡时仍广泛依赖脂质,其他物种(蟋蟀和蛾幼虫)则使脂质氧化速率恢复到饥饿前水平。尽管脂质和蛋白质对于脊椎动物和昆虫都是关键的代谢燃料,但昆虫在饥饿期间显然表现出更广泛的策略来分配这些有限的资源。