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PhD Exit Seminar -Hiwote Belay -Monday, June 4, 2018
June 4, 2018 @ 10:00 am - 11:00 am
PhD Exit Seminar
Monday, June 4, 2018 at 10:10am, Ramsay Wright Building, Room 432
Hiwote Belay (Sokolowski Lab)
“GENETIC VARIATION IN THE timeless GENE MEDIATES METABOLIC STATES OF Drosophila melanogaster IN RESPONSE TO PHOTOPERIOD”
Abstract
Genetic variations in the circadian clock may regulate photoperiod-induced anticipatory metabolic adjustments that allow organisms to meet the changes in energetic demands associated with different seasons. Both mammalian and Drosophila studies have shown that perturbed circadian feeding rhythm and abberant light cycles result in disruptions in fat and glucose metabolism. In this thesis, Drosophila melanogaster was used to investigate the effect of genetic variation in the circadian system on the regulation of feeding and metabolic responses to photoperiod.
Here, we analyzed the metabolic responses of two naturally occurring variants of the Drosophila timeless (tim) gene to changes in photoperiod. We found that ls-tim variants, which are known to have attenuated light-sensitivity and are more responsive to diapause, display metabolic traits that are associated with enhanced energy stores and reduced energy expenditure in response to a short-day. Analysis of tim RNA levels in the fat body revealed that it is elevated in ls-tim in response to a short-day suggesting that altered regulation of the clock in the fat body of ls-tim may mediate these enhanced metabolic adjustments to short-day. To examine the role of the foraging gene as a mediator of metabolic outputs regulated by the clock, we analyzed the circadian feeding pattern of foraging variants. Genetic variation in the foraging gene, which encodes cGMP dependant protein kinase (PKG), is known to regulate feeding behavior and energy homeostasis in Drosophila. Our results suggest that foraging regulates the frequency and daily distribution of meals.
These findings demonstrate that genetic variations in the circadian system are important in mediating photoperiodic responses to feeding and metabolic state. Characterization of a role of genetic variations in clock genes on the regulation of feeding and metabolism by abberant light cycles is important in identifying candidate pathways involved in metabolic perturbations associated with shift-work and Seasonal Affective Disorder.
Details
- Date:
- June 4, 2018
- Time:
-
10:00 am - 11:00 am
- Event Tags:
- CSB Seminar, PhD Exit Seminar
Venue
- Ramsay Wright Building, Room 432
-
25 Harbord St.
Toronto, ON M5S 3G5 Canada