21 research outputs found

    Assessing Basal and Acute Autophagic Responses in the Adult Drosophila Nervous System: The Impact of Gender, Genetics and Diet on Endogenous Pathway Profiles.

    No full text
    The autophagy pathway is critical for the long-term homeostasis of cells and adult organisms and is often activated during periods of stress. Reduced pathway efficacy plays a central role in several progressive neurological disorders that are associated with the accumulation of cytotoxic peptides and protein aggregates. Previous studies have shown that genetic and transgenic alterations to the autophagy pathway impacts longevity and neural aggregate profiles of adult Drosophila. In this study, we have identified methods to measure the acute in vivo induction of the autophagy pathway in the adult fly CNS. Our findings indicate that the genotype, age, and gender of adult flies can influence pathway responses. Further, we demonstrate that middle-aged male flies exposed to intermittent fasting (IF) had improved neuronal autophagic profiles. IF-treated flies also had lower neural aggregate profiles, maintained more youthful behaviors and longer lifespans, when compared to ad libitum controls. In summary, we present methodology to detect dynamic in vivo changes that occur to the autophagic profiles in the adult Drosophila CNS and that a novel IF-treatment protocol improves pathway response in the aging nervous system

    Using Drosophila as an integrated model to study mild repetitive traumatic brain injury.

    No full text
    Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In addition, there has been a growing appreciation that even repetitive, milder forms of TBI (mTBI) can have long-term deleterious consequences to neural tissues. Hampering our understanding of genetic and environmental factors that influence the cellular and molecular responses to injury has been the limited availability of effective genetic model systems that could be used to identify the key genes and pathways that modulate both the acute and long-term responses to TBI. Here we report the development of a severe and mild-repetitive TBI model using Drosophila. Using this system, key features that are typically found in mammalian TBI models were also identified in flies, including the activation of inflammatory and autophagy responses, increased Tau phosphorylation and neuronal defects that impair sleep-related behaviors. This novel injury paradigm demonstrates the utility of Drosophila as an effective tool to validate genetic and environmental factors that influence the whole animal response to trauma and to identify prospective therapies needed for the treatment of TBI

    Aging and Intermittent Fasting Impact on Transcriptional Regulation and Physiological Responses of Adult Drosophila Neuronal and Muscle Tissues

    No full text
    The progressive decline of the nervous system, including protein aggregate formation, reflects the subtle dysregulation of multiple functional pathways. Our previous work has shown intermittent fasting (IF) enhances longevity, maintains adult behaviors and reduces aggregates, in part, by promoting autophagic function in the aging Drosophila brain. To clarify the impact that IF-treatment has upon aging, we used high throughput RNA-sequencing technology to examine the changing transcriptome in adult Drosophila tissues. Principle component analysis (PCA) and other analyses showed ~1200 age-related transcriptional differences in head and muscle tissues, with few genes having matching expression patterns. Pathway components showing age-dependent expression differences were involved with stress response, metabolic, neural and chromatin remodeling functions. Middle-aged tissues also showed a significant increase in transcriptional drift-variance (TD), which in the CNS included multiple proteolytic pathway components. Overall, IF-treatment had a demonstrably positive impact on aged transcriptomes, partly ameliorating both fold and variance changes. Consistent with these findings, aged IF-treated flies displayed more youthful metabolic, behavioral and basal proteolytic profiles that closely correlated with transcriptional alterations to key components. These results indicate that even modest dietary changes can have therapeutic consequences, slowing the progressive decline of multiple cellular systems, including proteostasis in the aging nervous system

    Aging and the negative geotaxis response (NGR) of adult Drosophila.

    No full text
    <p>The NGR of outcrossed wild-type control male and female flies (<i>w<sup>1118</sup>/+</i>) was used to determining changes in average climbing index (CI, distance traveled within 5 seconds) between the ages of 1 and 4-weeks. *** P ≤ 0.001. See <b><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0132768#pone.0132768.s001" target="_blank">S1 Fig</a></b> for the design of the NGR apparatus and additional details.</p

    Changes to the lifespan and autophagy profiles of <i>chico</i><sup><i>1</i></sup>/+ male flies.

    No full text
    <p>(<b>A</b>) The average lifespan profiles of <i>chico</i><sup><i>1</i></sup>/+ mutant male flies exposed to <i>ad libitum</i> or IF treatment conditions, starting at 1-week of age. (<b>B</b>) Total head protein extracts from control (0h) or fasted (4h) male flies at 1-week, 3-week or IF-treated 3-week of age (n = 3), were used for Western blot analysis of the Atg8a, Ref(2)P, and Actin proteins. (<b>C</b>) The relative ratio of Atg8a-II to Atg8a-I proteins. *P ≤ 0.05.</p

    IF-dependent changes to the lifespan and autophagy profiles of <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> mutant flies.

    No full text
    <p>(<b>A</b>) The average lifespan profiles of <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> mutant male flies were exposed to <i>ad libitum</i> or IF treatment conditions starting at 1-week of age. (<b>B</b>) The climbing indexes (5-sec) of freely responding <i>ad libitum</i> or IF treated <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> male flies, which were performed at weekly intervals starting at 1-week and continuing until 4-weeks of age. (<b>C</b>) Western blots containing total protein extracts prepared from control (0h) or fasted (4h) <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> male fly heads taken at 1-week, 3-week or IF-treated 3-week of age (n = 3) were sequentially probed for Atg8a, Ref(2)P, and Actin proteins. (<b>D</b>) Quantification of Ref(2)P protein levels, normalized using Actin. (<b>E</b>) The relative ratio of Atg8a-II to Atg8a-I protein levels. (<b>F</b>) Western blots of Triton X-100 insoluble head extracts from 1-week, 3-week or IF-treated 3-week old of <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> male flies that were sequentially probed for the Ref(2)P, ubiquitin (UB), and Actin proteins. (<b>G</b>) Quantification of Ref(2)P and UB-proteins in the Triton X-100 insoluble fraction, normalized using Actin. *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001.</p

    Aging and Autophagic Function Influences the Progressive Decline of Adult Drosophila Behaviors

    Get PDF
    <div><p>Multiple neurological disorders are characterized by the abnormal accumulation of protein aggregates and the progressive impairment of complex behaviors. Our Drosophila studies demonstrate that middle-aged wild-type flies (WT, ~4-weeks) exhibit a marked accumulation of neural aggregates that is commensurate with the decline of the autophagy pathway. However, enhancing autophagy via neuronal over-expression of <i>Atg8a</i> (Atg8a-OE) reduces the age-dependent accumulation of aggregates. Here we assess basal locomotor activity profiles for single- and group-housed male and female WT flies and observed that only modest behavioral changes occurred by 4-weeks of age, with the noted exception of group-housed male flies. Male flies in same-sex social groups exhibit a progressive increase in nighttime activity. Infrared videos show aged group-housed males (4-weeks) are engaged in extensive bouts of courtship during periods of darkness, which is partly repressed during lighted conditions. Together, these nighttime courtship behaviors were nearly absent in young WT flies and aged Atg8a-OE flies. Previous studies have indicated a regulatory role for olfaction in male courtship partner choice. Coincidently, the mRNA expression profiles of several olfactory genes decline with age in WT flies; however, they are maintained in age-matched Atg8a-OE flies. Together, these results suggest that middle-aged male flies develop impairments in olfaction, which could contribute to the dysregulation of courtship behaviors during dark time periods. Combined, our results demonstrate that as Drosophila age, they develop early behavior defects that are coordinate with protein aggregate accumulation in the nervous system. In addition, the nighttime activity behavior is preserved when neuronal autophagy is maintained (Atg8a-OE flies). Thus, environmental or genetic factors that modify autophagic capacity could have a positive impact on neuronal aging and complex behaviors.</p></div

    Distribution of Atg8a positive punctae in the adult <i>Drosophila</i> CNS.

    No full text
    <p>(<b>A</b>) Representative confocal image (1.0 μm optical section, top left) of adult male fly brains following a 4-hour fast. Adult brains were co-stained with the anti-Elav neuronal (green) and the anti-Atg8a autophagy (red) markers. (<b>B</b>) Higher magnification images (see <b>Fig 1A</b> inset) highlight areas enriched with Atg8a positive punctae, which primarily include neuronal soma (cell bodies) and regions of neuropil (blue arrows). Yellow boxes (20 μm<sup>2</sup>) show the location of regions in the CNS that primarily contain neuronal soma that were used to count and establish autophagosome punctae profiles that occur in the adult fly brain. Additional, higher magnification images are included in <b><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0164239#pone.0164239.s003" target="_blank">S1A and S1B Fig</a></b> (regions highlighted by yellow arrows). (<b>C</b>) Magnified images from similar brain locations of non-fasted adult male flies stained with anti-Elav and anti-Atg8a antibodies. Yellow boxes indicate regions containing neuronal soma (green) that were used to count Atg8a positive punctae (red). (<b>D</b>) Average number of Atg8a positive punctae or autophagosomes in control (n = 53 fields) neural tissues and following a brief 4-hour fast (n = 66 fields). P*** ≤ 0.001.</p

    The influence of genetics on basal autophagy profiles occurring in the fly CNS.

    No full text
    <p>Age-matched WT (<i>w</i><sup><i>1118</i></sup>/+), <i>Atg8a</i><sup><i>1</i></sup> and <i>chico</i><sup><i>1</i></sup>/+ male flies (1-week) were collected and heads used to prepare total protein extracts. (<b>A</b>) Western blots were probed for Atg8a, Ref(2)P, ubiquitin (UB), and Actin proteins (n = 3). Quantification of total (<b>B</b>) Ref(2)P, (<b>C</b>) UB-proteins, (<b>D</b>) total Atg8a (I+II), and (<b>E</b>) Atg8a-II proteins, normalized using Actin. *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001.</p

    Influence of gender and fasting on autophagic responses and longevity profiles.

    No full text
    <p>Young WT female and male flies (<i>w</i><sup><i>1118</i></sup><i>/+</i>, 1-week) were subjected to 0, 4, 8 or 24 hours of fasting (1% agar). (<b>A</b>) Total protein extracts from adult heads were prepared for each condition (n = 3) and used to generate Western blots that were sequentially probed for the Atg8a, Ref(2)P, and Actin proteins. Quantification of the (<b>B</b>) Ref(2)P and (<b>C</b>) total Atg8a (I+II), and (<b>D</b>) Atg8a-II values normalized to Actin loading controls. (<b>E</b>) The relative ratio between the Atg8a-II and Atg8a-I proteins. (◆) represents significant differences between genders and (*) represents a difference within a gender specific group. *<sup>,</sup> ◆P≤ 0.05, **<sup>,</sup> ◆◆P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001.</p
    corecore