Perceptive costs of reproduction drive ageing and physiology in male Drosophila

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作者
Zachary M. Harvanek
Yang Lyu
Christi M. Gendron
Jacob C. Johnson
Shu Kondo
Daniel E. L. Promislow
Scott D. Pletcher
机构
[1] University of Michigan,Department of Molecular & Integrative Physiology
[2] Medical Scientist Training Program,Department of Pathology
[3] University of Michigan,Department of Biology
[4] Genetic Strains Research Center,undefined
[5] National Institute of Genetics,undefined
[6] University of Washington,undefined
[7] University of Washington,undefined
[8] Geriatrics Center,undefined
[9] University of Michigan,undefined
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摘要
Costs of reproduction are thought to result from natural selection optimizing organismal fitness within putative physiological constraints. Phenotypic and population genetic studies of reproductive costs are plentiful across taxa, but an understanding of their mechanistic basis would provide important insight into the diversity in life-history traits, including reproductive effort and ageing. Here, we dissect the causes and consequences of specific costs of reproduction in male Drosophila melanogaster. We find that key survival and physiological costs of reproduction arise from perception of the opposite sex, and they are reversed by the act of mating. In the absence of pheromone perception, males are free from reproductive costs on longevity, stress resistance and fat storage. The costs of perception and the benefits of mating are both mediated by evolutionarily conserved neuropeptidergic signalling molecules, as well as the transcription factor dFoxo. These results provide a molecular framework in which certain costs of reproduction arise as a result of self-imposed ‘decisions’ in response to perceptive neural circuits, which then orchestrate the control of life-history traits independently of physical or energetic effects associated with mating itself.
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