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Institute for Genetics, Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to M J Pankratz; Email: michael.pankratz{at}itg.fzk.de)
(C Melcher is now at Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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This issue is not only of basic biological interest, but also has major medical and agricultural implications. Changing food choices in modern developed countries, together with changes in lifestyle, have helped create major epidemics in conditions such as diabetes and obesity. The nervous system that has evolved to survive under conditions of food scarcity must now also deal with food and caloric excess. From an agricultural side, insects cause immense damage to crops. This problem is especially acute, precisely in regions where malnutrition and starvation pose the greatest threat. And in contrast to those of developed countries, many of the major health problems of underdeveloped countries stem from insect-transmitted diseases, such as malaria.
In this review, we highlight the use of Drosophila in studying neural circuits that control food intake. In particular, we outline the work in our laboratory that emphasizes the use of Drosophila molecular genetics in bridging studies of traditional physiological insect models with those emerging in vertebrates, focusing on the newly identified hugin neural circuit.
| Drosophila larval mutants defective in feeding behavior |
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To gain an entry point into the genes that could be involved in the feeding behavior, we carried out a genetic screen for larval mutants that could not feed. The screen was based on the fact that larvae are translucent; therefore, feeding them with dyed yeast allowed easy visualization of food intake. One of the mutants identified was pumpless (ppl), where the food is not swallowed from the pharynx into the esophagus (Zinke et al. 1999). These mutants have neither morphological defects in the feeding apparatus nor general locomotor defects, and they die as small larvae. They also display another altered feeding behavior, in that they move away from the food source. When wild-type larvae are placed on an agar surface with yeast paste in the middle, they spend most of their time buried in the yeast. By contrast, ppl larvae move about actively outside the yeast paste. In addition, ppl larvae do not show normal physiological starvation responses such as, for example, upregulation of lipase-encoding genes (Zinke et al. 2002). These observations gave rise to the idea that ppl animals feel full and therefore stop feeding prematurely. The ppl gene encodes a subunit of the glycine cleavage system, which catabolizes the amino acid glycine; ppl is expressed specifically in the fat body, an organ analogous to the vertebrate liver and adipocytes. Feeding wild-type animals with high levels of glycine and other amino acids also causes cessation of feeding and growth, and we proposed that some amino-acid-dependent signal from the fat body acts on the CNS to bring about the cessation of feeding (Zinke et al. 1999).
Subsequently, several other genetic manipulations were reported to trigger such wandering-like behavior. For example, overactivation of insulin receptor/PI3K signaling as well as overexpression of dFOXO, a direct mediator of insulin signaling, suppresses the growth and brings about larval wandering (Britton et al. 2002, Junger et al. 2003, Kramer et al. 2003). The expression of ppl is altered by nutrient conditions, suggesting it could also be a target of insulin signaling, but this remains to be determined (Zinke et al. 1999).
Intriguingly, a human condition is known, which derives from an inborn error of the glycine cleavage system, termed nonketotic hyperglycinemia. Some clinical features of nonketotic hyperglycinemia are described as follows (taken from (Nyhan 1989)): Most affected infants appear normal at birth and for a short interval, seldom longer than 48 h... After this interval, which may or may not await the initiation of protein-containing feedings, the infant develops lethargy and/or convulsions... With increasing lethargy there is anorexia leading to failure to feed.
Patients with nonketotic hyperglycinemia have elevated glycine levels in blood and urine. The level of free glycine in the brain is also elevated; the ratio of cerebrospinal fluid concentration to that of plasma is tenfold higher than normal (Nyhan 1989). As glycine is an inhibitory neurotransmitter, many of the neurological consequences, including feeding defects, could be due to the direct effects of high glycine on the nervous system. In Drosophila, defects in glycine cleavage may lead to accumulation of glycine in the hemolymph, which could then act on the CNS to effect stoppage of feeding. We have recently obtained evidence that free glycine level in ppl mutants is indeed increased (M J Pankratz, unpublished data). Furthermore, recent genetic manipulations in mice showed that altering amino-acid-dependent signaling pathways in the brain, such as target of rapamycin and GCN2-kinase pathways, also result in feeding behavior defects (Hao et al. 2005, Maurin et al. 2005, Cota et al. 2006).
In addition to acting as internal metabolic signals, amino acids may also influence the feeding behavior through altering external sensory perception. One of the most commonly used taste enhancers is the amino acid, glutamate, which generally acts as an excitatory neurotransmitter. The role of mono-sodium glutamate as a flavor enhancer is well known. Growing up in a Korean household (one of the authors), a bottle of ajinomoto, a brand name for monosodium glutamate, was a standard presence on the dining table. As amino acids are the building blocks for driving cellular and organismal growth, it is not surprising that they should have such profound effects on taste and feeding response in the CNS.
| Neuromedins and hugin |
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The hugin gene encodes a prepropeptide that can be cleaved into several neuropeptides, one named PK-2 and another hugin-
(Meng et al. 2002). Recently, we suggested that hugin is a homolog of human neuromedin U (NmU; Melcher et al. 2006). Sequence analysis based on one of the hugin cleavage products, PK-2, revealed structural homologies between mammalian sequences and those from other insects (Fig. 1
). Mammalian NmU is closely related to another neuropeptide encoding gene, neuromedin S (NmS; Mori et al. 2005), with the last seven amino acids being identical in all cases. For the moth Helicoverpa zea, the pheromone biosynthesis-activating neuropeptide (PBAN)-encoding gene neuropeptide (PGN-8) derives from the same prepropeptide that generates PBAN; (Choi et al. 2003, Hull et al. 2004). From additional sequence analysis and functional studies on bioactive properties of these neuropeptides, it seems that there is considerable variation in the length of the N-terminal region, and that the most conserved and potent bioactive region lies in the last 79 amino acids. Similarities between these neuropeptides extend well in to the functional levels, including brain-specific expression domains as well as feeding-related mis- and overexpression phenotypes (Melcher et al. 2006).
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| To eat or not to eat: feeding initiation and tasteful decision making |
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Acceptance of food based on food quality as well as feeding status of the animal also seems to be regulated by the centrally and peripherally expressed neuropeptide F (npf) and its receptor (npfr; Brown et al. 1999, Shen & Cai 2001, Wu et al. 2003, 2005a,, Wu et al. b). Recent work on the Drosophila npf/npfr system has demonstrated its involvement in suppressing aversion to noxious food in starved larvae (Wu et al. 2005a) as well as in regulating hunger-driven motivational feeding on less accessible solid food (Wu et al. 2005b). Interestingly, there are again striking structural and functional similarities between the Drosophila npf/npfr system and its vertebrate homolog, the neuropeptide Y/neuropeptide Y receptor (see Wu et al. 2003 and references therein). It is also noteworthy that npf, which is highly expressed in young third instar larvae attracted to food and whose overexpression delays onset of stop of feeding in old third instar larvae prior to pupariation (Wu et al. 2003), was found to be upregulated in klu mutants that display premature stop of food intake (Melcher & Pankratz 2005). It remains speculative whether or how, in these mutants, the overactive hugin system overrides npf signaling to cause stop of feeding. One difficulty in integrating the role of the npf/npfr system into central regulation of the feeding behavior in Drosophila is its peripheral expression in neuroendocrine cells in the gut (Brown et al. 1999), an issue that has not yet been taken into account at all.
| The psychology of feeding behavior in flies and man |
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| Outlook |
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| Acknowledgements |
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| Funding |
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| References |
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Received in final form 4 January 2007
Accepted 4 January 2007
Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 8 January 2007
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