The Use of Drosophila Melanogaster as A Model Organism To Study The Effect Of Innate Immunity On Metabolism
التاريخ
2020البيانات الوصفية
عرض كامل للتسجيلةالملخص
Apart from its traditional role in disease control, recent body of evidence has 
implicated a role of the immune system in regulating metabolic homeostasis. Owing to 
the importance of this “immune-metabolic alignment” in dictating a state of health or 
disease, a proper mechanistic understanding of this alignment is crucial in opening up 
for promising therapeutic approaches against a broad range of chronic, metabolic, and 
inflammatory disorders like obesity, diabetes, and inflammatory bowel syndrome. In 
this project, we addressed the role of the Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator 
of transcription (JAK/STAT) innate immune pathway in regulating different metabolic 
parameters using the Drosophila melanogaster (DM) fruit fly model organism. Mutant 
JAK/STAT pathway flies with a systemic knockdown of either Domeless (Dome) 
[domeG0282], the receptor that activates JAK/STAT signaling, or the signal-transducer 
and activator of transcription protein at 92E (Stat92E) [stat92EEY10528], were used. The 
results of the study revealed that blocking JAK/STAT signaling alters the metabolic 
profile of mutant flies. Both domeG0282 and stat92EEY10528 mutants had an increase in 
body weight, lipid deprivation from their fat body (lipid storage organ in flies), irregular 
accumulation of lipid droplets in the gut, systemic elevation of glucose and triglyceride 
levels, and differential down-regulation in the relative gene expression of different 
peptide hormones (Tachykinin, Allatostatin C, and Diuretic hormone 31) known to 
regulate metabolic homeostasis in flies. Because the JAK/STAT pathway is 
evolutionary conserved between invertebrates and vertebrates, our potential findings in 
the fruit fly serves as a platform for further immune-metabolic translational studies in 
more complex mammalian systems including humans.
indicates that the FFQ can be used as a valid dietary method to assess vitamin D status in Qatar’s population.
معرّف المصادر الموحد
https://doi.org/10.29117/quarfe.2020.0224DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/16807المجموعات
- Theme 2: Population, Health & Wellness [118 items ]
 


