Abstract

BackgroundThe core functions of the insulin/insulin-like signaling and target of rapamycin (IIS/TOR) pathway are nutrient sensing, energy homeostasis, growth, and regulation of stress responses. This pathway is also known to interact directly and indirectly with the sex determination regulatory hierarchy. The IIS/TOR pathway plays a role in directing sexually dimorphic traits, including dimorphism of growth, metabolism, stress and behavior. Previous studies of sexually dimorphic gene expression in the adult head, which includes both nervous system and endocrine tissues, have revealed variation in sex-differential expression, depending in part on genotype and environment. To understand the degree to which the environmentally responsive insulin signaling pathway contributes to sexual dimorphism of gene expression, we examined the effect of perturbation of the pathway on gene expression in male and female Drosophila heads.ResultsOur data reveal a large effect of insulin signaling on gene expression, with greater than 50% of genes examined changing expression. Males and females have a shared gene expression response to knock-down of InR function, with significant enrichment for pathways involved in metabolism. Perturbation of insulin signaling has a greater impact on gene expression in males, with more genes changing expression and with gene expression differences of larger magnitude. Primarily as a consequence of the response in males, we find that reduced insulin signaling results in a striking increase in sex-differential expression. This includes sex-differences in expression of immune, defense and stress response genes, genes involved in modulating reproductive behavior, genes linking insulin signaling and ageing, and in the insulin signaling pathway itself.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that perturbation of insulin signaling results in thousands of genes displaying sex differences in expression that are not differentially expressed in control conditions. Thus, insulin signaling may play a role in variability of somatic, sex-differential expression. The finding that perturbation of the IIS/TOR pathway results in an altered landscape of sex-differential expression suggests a role of insulin signaling in the physiological underpinnings of trade-offs, sexual conflict and sex differences in expression variability.

Highlights

  • The core functions of the insulin/insulin-like signaling and target of rapamycin (IIS/TOR) pathway are nutrient sensing, energy homeostasis, growth, and regulation of stress responses

  • To determine the impact of reduced insulin signaling during adult stages on gene expression, expression of a dominant-negative, insulin-like receptor (InRDN; [47]) was induced in virgin males and females four days after eclosion, for four days, using the drug-inducible GeneSwitch system [48, 49]

  • Sex differences in the response to insulin signaling within the Insulin/insulin-like signaling (IIS)/TOR pathway There are large and significant changes in expression of individual genes in the IIS/TOR pathway itself, with each gene showing unique responses in the four comparisons that we focused on in this study (Fig. 6)

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Summary

Introduction

The core functions of the insulin/insulin-like signaling and target of rapamycin (IIS/TOR) pathway are nutrient sensing, energy homeostasis, growth, and regulation of stress responses. This pathway is known to interact directly and indirectly with the sex determination regulatory hierarchy. Given the availability of sophisticated genetic tools, flexibility and low cost, Drosophila is an important model for understanding the role of the insulin/insulin-like signaling and target of rapamycin (IIS/TOR) pathway in aging, stress and metabolic disease [1,2,3]. The suite of biological processes affected by insulin signaling is broadly similar in the animal systems studied far This includes roles of IIS/TOR in metabolism, growth, nutrient sensing, stress, lifespan, and reproduction

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