4.6 Article

Alpha- and beta-adrenergic octopamine receptors in muscle and heart are required for Drosophila exercise adaptations

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008778

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Funding

  1. NIH [1RO1AG059683]
  2. Physiology Department Summer Research Fellowship Award
  3. [R01NS086778]

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Endurance exercise has broadly protective effects across organisms, increasing metabolic fitness and reducing incidence of several age-related diseases.Drosophilahas emerged as a useful model for studying changes induced by chronic endurance exercise, as exercising flies experience improvements to various aspects of fitness at the cellular, organ and organismal level. The activity of octopaminergic neurons is sufficient to induce the conserved cellular and physiological changes seen following endurance training. All 4 octopamine receptors are required in at least one target tissue, but only one,Oct beta 1R, is required for all of them. Here, we perform tissue- and adult-specific knockdown of alpha- and beta-adrenergic octopamine receptors in several target tissues. We find that reduced expression ofOct beta 1Rin adult muscles abolishes exercise-induced improvements in endurance, climbing speed, flight, cardiac performance and fat-body catabolism in maleDrosophila. Importantly,Oct beta 1Rand OAMB expression in the heart is also required cell-nonautonomously for adaptations in other tissues, such as skeletal muscles in legs and adult fat body. These findings indicate that activation of distinct octopamine receptors in skeletal and cardiac muscle are required forDrosophilaexercise adaptations, and suggest that cell non-autonomous factors downstream of octopaminergic activation play a key role.

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