Summary of ssbd-repos-00081

SSBD:database
URL

Name
ssbd-repos-00081 (81-Yasugi-DmeCellDyn)
URL
DOI
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Title
Staining image of the autophagy in the wild-type and Treh mutant drosophila
Description
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Submited Date
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Release Date
2018-11-14
Updated Date
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License
Funding information
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File formats
Data size
4.7 MB

Organism
D. melanogaster
Strain
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Cell Line
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Genes
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Proteins
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GO Molecular Function (MF)
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GO Biological Process (BP)
autophagy
GO Cellular Component (CC)
nucleus
Study Type
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Imaging Methods
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Method Summary
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Related paper(s)

Tetsuo Yasugi, Takayuki Yamada, Takashi Nishimura (2017) Adaptation to dietary conditions by trehalose metabolism in Drosophila., Scientific reports, Volume 7, Number 1, pp. 1619

Published in 2017 May 9 (Electronic publication in May 9, 2017, midnight )

(Abstract) Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide that serves as the main sugar component of haemolymph in insects. Trehalose hydrolysis enzyme, called trehalase, is highly conserved from bacteria to humans. However, our understanding of the physiological role of trehalase remains incomplete. Here, we analyze the phenotypes of several Trehalase (Treh) loss-of-function alleles in a comparative manner in Drosophila. The previously reported mutant phenotype of Treh affecting neuroepithelial stem cell maintenance and differentiation in the optic lobe is caused by second-site alleles in addition to Treh. We further report that the survival rate of Treh null mutants is significantly influenced by dietary conditions. Treh mutant larvae are lethal not only on a low-sugar diet but also under low-protein diet conditions. A reduction in adaptation ability under poor food conditions in Treh mutants is mainly caused by the overaccumulation of trehalose rather than the loss of Treh, because the additional loss of Tps1 mitigates the lethal effect of Treh mutants. These results demonstrate that proper trehalose metabolism plays a critical role in adaptation under various environmental conditions.
(MeSH Terms)

Contact(s)
Takashi Nishimura
Organization(s)
RIKEN , Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research , Laboratory for Growth Control Signaling
Image Data Contributors
Quantitative Data Contributors

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