Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006126
Title: Steroid Hormone Signaling Is Essential for Pheromone Production and Oenocyte Survival
Authors: Chiang Y.N. 
Tan K.J.
Chung H.
Lavrynenko O.
Shevchenko A.
Yew J.Y.
Keywords: 20 hydroxyecdysonic acid
ecdysone
ecdysterone
hydrocarbon
pheromone
steroid hormone
steroid reductase
unclassified drug
ecdysterone
hydrocarbon
lipid
oxidoreductase
pheromone
steroid
adult
adulthood
age
animal cell
animal experiment
animal tissue
Article
cell loss
cell survival
controlled study
cuticle
desiccation
Drosophila melanogaster
embryo
embryo development
female
gender
gene identification
gene overexpression
gene repression
gene silencing
hormone synthesis
lethality
lifespan
lipogenesis
male
mass fragmentography
nonhuman
oenocyte
RNA interference
spidey gene
animal
genetics
metabolism
physiology
reproduction
sexual development
signal transduction
Animals
Drosophila melanogaster
Ecdysterone
Female
Hydrocarbons
Lipids
Male
Oxidoreductases
Pheromones
Reproduction
RNA Interference
Sex Characteristics
Signal Transduction
Steroids
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Citation: Chiang Y.N., Tan K.J., Chung H., Lavrynenko O., Shevchenko A., Yew J.Y. (2016). Steroid Hormone Signaling Is Essential for Pheromone Production and Oenocyte Survival. PLoS Genetics 12 (6) : e1006126. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006126
Abstract: Many of the lipids found on the cuticles of insects function as pheromones and communicate information about age, sex, and reproductive status. In Drosophila, the composition of the information-rich lipid profile is dynamic and changes over the lifetime of an individual. However, the molecular basis of this change is not well understood. To identify genes that control cuticular lipid production in Drosophila, we performed a RNA interference screen and used Direct Analysis in Real Time and gas chromatography mass spectrometry to quantify changes in the chemical profiles. Twelve putative genes were identified whereby transcriptional silencing led to significant differences in cuticular lipid production. Amongst them, we characterized a gene which we name spidey, and which encodes a putative steroid dehydrogenase that has sex- and age-dependent effects on viability, pheromone production, and oenocyte survival. Transcriptional silencing or overexpression of spidey during embryonic development results in pupal lethality and significant changes in levels of the ecdysone metabolite 20-hydroxyecdysonic acid and 20-hydroxyecdysone. In contrast, inhibiting gene expression only during adulthood resulted in a striking loss of oenocyte cells and a concomitant reduction of cuticular hydrocarbons, desiccation resistance, and lifespan. Oenocyte loss and cuticular lipid levels were partially rescued by 20-hydroxyecdysone supplementation. Taken together, these results identify a novel regulator of pheromone synthesis and reveal that ecdysteroid signaling is essential for the maintenance of cuticular lipids and oenocytes throughout adulthood. © 2016 Chiang et al.
Source Title: PLoS Genetics
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/165385
ISSN: 15537390
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006126
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