Tissue nonautonomous effects of fat body methionine metabolism on imaginal disc repair in Drosophila

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Abstract

Regulatory mechanisms for tissue repair and regeneration within damaged tissue have been extensively studied. However, the systemic regulation of tissue repair remains poorly understood. To elucidate tissue nonautonomous control of repair process, it is essential to induce local damage, independent of genetic manipulations in uninjured parts of the body. Herein, we develop a system in Drosophila for spatiotemporal tissue injury using a temperaturesensitive form of diphtheria toxin A domain driven by the Q system to study factors contributing to imaginal disc repair. Using this technique, we demonstrate that methionine metabolism in the fat body, a counterpart of mammalian liver and adipose tissue, supports the repair processes of wing discs. Local injury to wing discs decreases methionine and S-adenosylmethionine, whereas it increases S-adenosylhomocysteine in the fat body. Fat body-specific genetic manipulation of methionine metabolism results in defective disc repair but does not affect normal wing development. Our data indicate the contribution of tissue interactions to tissue repair in Drosophila, as local damage to wing discs influences fat body metabolism, and proper control of methionine metabolism in the fat body, in turn, affects wing regeneration.

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Kashio, S., Obata, F., Zhang, L., Katsuyama, T., Chihara, T., & Miura, M. (2016). Tissue nonautonomous effects of fat body methionine metabolism on imaginal disc repair in Drosophila. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(7), 1835–1840. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1523681113

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