Award details

Genomic responses to mating signals

ReferenceBB/H008047/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Tracey Chapman
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Tamas Dalmay, Dr Claudia Fricke, Professor Vincent Moulton
Institution University of East Anglia
DepartmentBiological Sciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 497,959
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 12/04/2010
End date 18/08/2013
Duration40 months

Abstract

Discovering the genomic basis of fundamentally important phenotypes is a major challenge. We have recently determined genome-level responses in female D. melanogaster fruitfies to the male 'sex peptide' (SP), a molecule delivered during mating that has striking effects on male and female fitness. This is the first example, to our knowledge, to report simultaneous differential expression of mRNAs and microRNAs (miRs) in response to an external stimulus. We have also documented dramatic differences in SP phenotypes following manipulation of adult female diet. Hence, we are in a timely position, using this system, to identify and characterise the key miRs involved in SP responses, and - given that adult nutrition is key to the magnitude of SP responses - to determine how the genomic profiles of SP responses alter following short- and long-term manipulation of nutrition. We have 2 specific major objectives: (1) to characterise miRs identified as important in the SP responses at the functional level, using both computational and experimental approaches, (2) to test the genomic and phenotypic SP responses of females to variation in short- and long-term nutrition. The proposal also offers a general test of an important hypothesis: that plastic, short-term responses are achieved by different mechanisms than long-term, evolved responses. This is based upon the premise that short-term responses are more likely through adjustments to existing mRNAs rather than via de novo mRNA synthesis that may be more characteristic of longer-term changes.

Summary

You may not know whether 'love changes everything', but, scientifically speaking, the act of mating certainly does. Research focussed on the varied and inventive mating habits of invertebrates reveals the astonishing ways in which males can remodel the behaviour and physiology of the females with which they mate. This includes the transfer during mating by males of chemicals that go deep into female brains and nervous systems to alter behaviour, and those that effectively take over the female reproductive system. Small wonder then that females are sometimes resistant to such manipulations. Our recent work reveals just how global and sophisticated are the changes wrought upon females by mating males. We examined the responses of female fruitflies that mated with males that either did or did not transfer during mating a single ejaculate 'sex peptide' known to affect female sexual receptivity and egg laying. We examined both how messenger RNAs (mRNAs, that make gene products), and microRNAs (miRs, which sit on mRNAs and block them or target them for destruction) changed in females following receipt of sex peptide. We found many alterations to mRNAs, but what was really striking was the number of miRs that were different. This is consistent with the emerging general view that miRs have extremely important and widespread roles in regulating how genes work, with 20-30% of all genes (roughly 13,000 genes in the fruitfly) estimated as targets for miRs. Hence sex peptide sets in train global effects on female genomes not only at the level of DNA to RNA synthesis (transcription), but also on the rate at which RNA is translated (i.e. made into proteins). We are interested in SP because it has a 'swiss army knife' of functions and can alter the reproductive performance of both males and females. Remarkably, SP can significantly benefit the reproductive performance of males at the expense of that of females. This shows that SP plays a role in the battle of the sexes, where males can gain by maximising their returns from each mating even if that results in a decrease in the longer term reproductive prospects of their mates. SP benefits males because it decreases female sexual receptivity for several days and increases egg-laying. Hence males that transfer SP father more offspring than males that lack SP. However, females that receive elevated levels of SP suffer adverse consequences in the long term. The effects of SP are dependent on female diet and can be significantly altered, abolished or even reversed in sign under poor and good quality food. This research puts us in a timely position to address the following two fundamental questions: (1) to find out how male sex peptide intervenes in the female genome - which are the key genes that are targeted by miRs following receipt of sex peptide? and secondly - given that female diet is key to determining how much females are able to respond to sex peptide - (2) to examine how female genomes respond to sex peptide following both short- and long-term (evolutionary) changes in diet. The research is important because this is the first example we have where we can investigate the co-ordinated changes in both mRNAs and miRs to an external stimulus like the sex peptide that underlies important reproductive functions in both sexes. The fact that diet is also an important part of how females respond to sex peptide is also crucial as it allows us to test at the level of the genome SP responses following both short- and long-term alterations to diet. Our research will also therefore show miRs that change under different dietary conditions, which is important because diet is also a crucial determinant of lifespan.

Impact Summary

The School of Biological Sciences (BIO) is committed to significant growth in engagement and enterprise. There are four main areas in which the research will have broad impact for a range of beneficiaries across the public, private sectors and general public: 1. Diet and Health. With the impact of diet on reproduction and ageing being of topical interest across the public, health and political domains, our results are anticipated to have broad impact, especially given that food lifestyles have changed dramatically in recent times in human populations, generally to detrimental effect. 2. Novel microRNAs. We plan to build upon what we think is the first example of genomic changes in mRNAs and small RNAs to an external stimulus. This is an exciting scientific development in a rapidly developing field. 3. The battle of the sexes. The interplay between males and females is especially powerful in evolutionary terms. There is intuitive appeal in the study of adaptations that are good for males and bad for females, and vice versa. There is also an applied context of this research in terms of the husbandry of insect pests that are mass reared for control. 4. Bioinformatics. Our datasets will be valuable for technological development of bioinformatics toolkits and prediction algorithms because there are scant data from profiles of mRNAs and miRs. Who will benefit from the research and how? Public sector: In the public sector, we aim to communicate to health professionals and ultimately through to policy makers. There is much interest in the prophylactic effects of food manipulations of age related pathologies, and our work will be relevant here. We have good links with the School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, and we have already co-ordinated bids for funding with them and with the Institute of Food Research. Private sector: In the private sector we will be using the research and enterprise office staff to develop CASEing for studentships to investigate the links between miRs that respond to food manipulations. The aim of doing this is to work towards future KE partnerships. We are already developing in the private sector the application of knowledge from the study of reproductive behaviour and post-mating paternity mechanisms in fruitfly pests in a CASE studentship together with Oxford insect technologies (Oxitec), and they are supporting a BBSRC research grant application made in January. General public: We are actively involved with the press office in highlighting research papers and grant successes at a local and national level. We wish to highlight our research findings to the engagement office so that the results can be directly cascaded through local schools to provide immediate impact. Should this grant be successful, we will press release it to disseminate the aims of our research. The UEA also has a series of open lectures and we plan to give one of these. Collaborations and partnerships The research team is a new collaboration and each member has distinct expertise which aids synergy. In relation to impact, we will collaborate fully on all activities listed here. Exploitation and Application We will be seeking to exploit the research. Specific partnership agreements are already in place for related projects. We will have 6 monthly meetings with our enterprise and engagement officer to discuss results and work up opportunities. To protect the research we will have IP and MTA agreements with new collaborators, drawn up by our research contracts office. Capability All personnel, and particularly the PDRAs will be expected to engage with the impact agenda. Other staff involved will be our web development officer, our media office who will advise and assist with press releases and our School enterprise and engagement staff. All investigators have a track record of such activities and have sought training from staff development programmes.
Committee Research Committee A (Animal disease, health and welfare)
Research TopicsX – not assigned to a current Research Topic
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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