Djawdan M, Chippindale A K, Rose M R, Bradley T J
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, 92697-2525, USA.
Physiol Zool. 1998 Sep-Oct;71(5):584-94. doi: 10.1086/515963.
We have examined starvation and desiccation resistance in 43 outbred populations of Drosophila melanogaster that have diverged from a common ancestral population as a result of a variety of defined selection protocols. The populations differ up to 8.5-fold in desiccation resistance and up to 10-fold in starvation resistance. We used these populations to search for evolved physiological changes that might explain the differences in stress resistance. We examined two hypotheses for increased stress resistance that had been proposed previously in the literature: (1) that increments in starvation resistance are principally the result of differential lipid accumulation, and (2) that changes in glycogen accumulation play a role in evolved increases in resistance to desiccation stress. By quantifying desiccation resistance, starvation resistance, lipid content, and carbohydrate content in each of our populations of flies, we were able to demonstrate strong correlations between the capacity of the flies to resist starvation and the quantity of lipid or carbohydrate that the flies had stored. The strongest correlation (R2 = 0.99) was observed when the total energy content of both the lipid and carbohydrate stores was regressed against starvation resistance. These results demonstrate that the flies responded to selection for starvation resistance through a genetically determined increase in both lipid and carbohydrate storage. Similar analyses of the correlation between lipid storage or total energy storage and desiccation resistance revealed no significant correlations. Carbohydrate storage was significantly correlated with desiccation resistance in female but not in male flies. These results suggest that different forms of stress are resisted with distinct physiological mechanisms and that the evolutionary response of the flies to stress selection is specific to the stress imposed.
我们检测了43个黑腹果蝇远交群体的抗饥饿和抗干燥能力,这些群体由于各种明确的选择方案而从一个共同的祖先群体中分化出来。这些群体的抗干燥能力差异高达8.5倍,抗饥饿能力差异高达10倍。我们利用这些群体来寻找可能解释抗逆性差异的进化生理变化。我们检验了文献中先前提出的关于增强抗逆性的两个假设:(1)抗饥饿能力的提高主要是脂质积累差异的结果;(2)糖原积累的变化在抗干燥胁迫能力的进化增强中起作用。通过量化我们每个果蝇群体的抗干燥能力、抗饥饿能力、脂质含量和碳水化合物含量,我们能够证明果蝇抵抗饥饿的能力与果蝇储存的脂质或碳水化合物数量之间存在很强的相关性。当脂质和碳水化合物储存的总能量含量与抗饥饿能力进行回归分析时,观察到最强的相关性(R2 = 0.99)。这些结果表明,果蝇通过基因决定的脂质和碳水化合物储存增加来响应抗饥饿选择。对脂质储存或总能量储存与抗干燥能力之间相关性的类似分析没有发现显著相关性。碳水化合物储存与雌性果蝇的抗干燥能力显著相关,但与雄性果蝇无关。这些结果表明,不同形式的胁迫通过不同的生理机制来抵抗,并且果蝇对应激选择的进化反应是特定于所施加的胁迫的。