4.6 Article

Role of Fat Body Lipogenesis in Protection against the Effects of Caloric Overload in Drosophila

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 288, Issue 12, Pages 8028-8042

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M112.371047

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health through the Washington University Diabetes Research and Training Center [T32 GM007464, 5K12HD001459-12, P60 DK20579]
  2. National Institutes of Health through the Nutrition Obesity Research Center [P20 RR020643, P30 DK56341]
  3. National Institutes of Health through Biomedical Mass Spectrometry Resource [P41-RR00954]
  4. Small Business Technology Transfer grant [1R41DK76338]
  5. Children's Discovery Institute [MD-II-2010-41]
  6. Washington University

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The Drosophila fat body is a liver- and adipose-like tissue that stores fat and serves as a detoxifying and immune responsive organ. We have previously shown that a high sugar diet leads to elevated hemolymph glucose and systemic insulin resistance in developing larvae and adults. Here, we used stable isotope tracer feeding to demonstrate that rearing larvae on high sugar diets impaired the synthesis of esterified fatty acids from dietary glucose. Fat body lipid profiling revealed changes in both carbon chain length and degree of unsaturation of fatty acid substituents, particularly in stored triglycerides. We tested the role of the fat body in larval tolerance of caloric excess. Our experiments demonstrated that lipogenesis was necessary for animals to tolerate high sugar feeding as tissue-specific loss of orthologs of carbohydrate response element-binding protein or stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 resulted in lethality on high sugar diets. By contrast, increasing the fat content of the fat body by knockdown of king-tubby was associated with reduced hyperglycemia and improved growth and tolerance of high sugar diets. Our work supports a critical role for the fat body and the Drosophila carbohydrate response element-binding protein ortholog in metabolic homeostasis in Drosophila.

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