Yang Z,Yu Y,Zhang V,Tian Y,Qi W,Wang L*.Octopamine mediates starvation-induced hyperactivity in adult Drosophila.Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2015 Apr 21;112(16):5219-24.April 08,2015

编辑: Date:2015/04/08

Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2015 Apr 21;112(16):5219-24.

Zhe Yang, YueYu, Vivian Zhang, Yinjun Tian,WeiQi, and Liming Wang*

Abstract

Starved animals often exhibit elevated locomotion, which has been speculated to partly resemble foraging behavior and facilitate food acquisition and energy intake. Despite its importance, the neural mechanism underlying this behavior remains unknown in any species. In this study we confirmed and extended previous findings that starvation induced locomotor activity in adult fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster. We also showed that starvationinduced hyperactivity was directed toward the localization and acquisition of food sources, because it could be suppressed upon the detection of food cues via both central nutrient-sensing and peripheral sweet-sensing mechanisms, via induction of food ingestion. We further found that octopamine, the insect counterpart of vertebrate norepinephrine, as well as the neurons expressing octopamine, were both necessary and sufficient for starvationinduced hyperactivity. Octopamine was not required for starvation-induced changes in feeding behaviors, suggesting independent regulations of energy intake behaviors upon starvation. Taken together, our results establish a quantitative behavioral paradigm to investigate the regulation of energy homeostasis by the CNS and identify a conserved neural substrate that links organismal metabolic state to a specific behavioral output.

Text link: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2015/04/01/1417838112.full.pdf