Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Drosophila as a useful model for understanding the evolutionary physiology of obesity resistance and metabolic thrift.
- Journal:
- Fly
- Year:
- 2021
- Authors:
- J Gray, Lindsey et al.
- Affiliation:
- Charles Perkins Centre and School of Life and Environmental Sciences · United Kingdom
Abstract
Evolved metabolic thriftiness in humans is a proposed contributor to the obesity epidemic. Insect models have been shown to evolve both 'metabolic thrift' in response to rearing on high-protein diets that promote leanness, and 'obesity resistance' when reared on fattening high-carbohydrate, low-protein foods. Despite the hypothesis that human obesity is caused by evolved metabolic thrift, genetic contributions to this physiological trait remain elusive. Here we conducted a pilot study to determine whether thrift and obesity resistance can arise under laboratory based 'quasi-natural selection' in the genetic model organism. We found that both these traits can evolve within 16 generations. Contrary to predictions from the 'thrifty genotype/phenotype' hypothesis, we found that when animals from a metabolic thrift inducing high-protein environment are mismatched to fattening high-carbohydrate foods, they did not become 'obese'. Rather, they accumulate less triglyceride than control animals, not more. We speculate that this may arise through as yet un-quantified parental effects - potentially epigenetic. This study establishes thatcould be a useful model for elucidating the role of the trans- and inter-generational effects of diet on the genetics of metabolic traits in higher animals.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33704003/