Drosophila Arc1 is required for metabolic resilience and developmental timing during dietary challenges
Reis, T.; Zhang, W.; Schmitt, L.; Riemondy, K.
Show abstract
Energy homeostasis at the organismal level requires balancing energy storage and mobilization to provide sufficient fuel for energy-intensive processes like development without depleting or accumulating excess stores. Fluctuations in the nutritional content of the diet present a challenge to the pathways that maintain energy balance. We previously identified the Drosophila melanogaster counterpart of human ARC (activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein) as a brain-expressed protein that regulates energy storage in the major fat storage tissue of the fly, the fat body. Here we show that Arc1 expression in the brain responds to changes in diet and insulin-like peptide levels. Mutating Arc1 perturbs the ability of larvae to maintain normal body fat and rates of development upon dietary changes: mutants develop slower or faster than wild-type on nutrient-poor or nutrient-rich diets, respectively. Excess fat storage in Arc1 mutants becomes an advantage upon starvation, prolonging survival relative to the wild type. In addition to metabolic and neuronal genes, transcriptomic analysis revealed changes in key developmental drivers of development, in both diet-dependent and - independent manners. This study supports a model in which nutrient regulation of Arc1 via insulin-like peptide signaling couples dietary changes to changes in metabolism -- to maintain energy homeostasis -- and production of hormone signals, to support timely development. In this role, Arc1 is a central player in a buffering mechanism that coordinates nutrient availability, organismal metabolism, and developmental rate.
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