Organisms, from bacteria to humans, modulate their food intake and energy expenditure in accordance with their internal nutrient state, allowing for maintenance of healthy energy balance. During evolution conserved homeostatic mechanisms developed to cope with potential nutrient deprivation from a fluctuating food supply. Hence when food was plentiful the excess energy is stored as fat reserves, which can be mobilized during a future scarcity. However, in the 21st century nutritional scarcity is the exception rather than the norm, resulting in an increasing prevalence of obesity in humans. Obesity impacts progression of cancer and neurodegeneration, accelerates aging and impedes a healthy lifestyle. Previously, a number of studies focused on how organisms respond to nutritional scarcity, and have resulted in elucidation of evolutionarily conserved mechanisms that orchestrate a response to food scarcity.
Our aim i s to understand the opposite nutritional state, by focusing on how organisms respond to chronic ?over-nutrition?. We expect that these mechanisms will be both short-range, acute, local cell biological changes and also prolonged time-scale, inter- organ systemic physiological responses. Thus far, we identified previously uncharacterized surplus signaling components. Unexpectedly we found molecules that are critical for scarcity responses, are also key regulators of nutritional surplus. Given that storage of surplus evolved as a protective strategy to survive future nutritional scarcity, it is likely that an overlapping set of molecules is employed to allow organisms to sense and respond to these two mutually exclusive states. Premised on our observations, we hypothesize that a suite of ?bidirectional? switch proteins couple scarcity and surplus mechanisms, allowing organisms to toggle between the two as needed. We further surmise that chronic nutrient surplus, a state that was rare during the evolution, impairs the capacity of this ?bidirectional molecular switch? to efficiently alternate in response to nutritional state, resulting in energy imbalance. Our short-term goal is to a) codify the molecular suite underpinning the bidirectional nutritional switch; b) identify new bidirectional nutrient switches that facilitate inter-organ communication required for energy balance. Then, in the medium-term we will c) systematically dissect how the bidirectional mechanisms degrade and lose plasticity when subject to chronic nutrient surplus. Finally, our long-term goal is to d) develop pharmaceutical interventions that target the bidirectional molecular suite, and test their effect in restoring energy balance in systems that have been nutritionally stressed. The fundamental principles we derive from this work will illuminate how molecular components designed to function in a certain physiological state can be co-opted to achieve an antagonistic response. The principles garnered from our studies will be applicable to understanding how viruses hijack immune cells, or explain how cancerous cells trick cell-death pathways and over-proliferate. Ultimately our goal is to address outstanding issues in energy physiology, by adopting a comprehensive and conceptually novel approach, in a highly tractable model.

Public Health Relevance

The goals are to discover evolutionary conserved mechanisms that govern maintenance of healthy energy balance. Using Drosophila as a primary model system we will pursue a multi-pronged investigation into how energy availability is sensed, communicated and integrated. The proposed work will illuminate mechanics of how cellular mechanisms, which operate under opposing physiological states, interface with each other. Though our work is done in the context of energy balance maintenance, the findings will be generalizable and of interest to scientists who work on problems ranging from stress signaling to immunity, proliferation to cancer. Ultimately the findings will be relevant to generation of therapeutics for treatment of chronic health disorders such as obesity, anorexia, and diabetes.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Unknown (R35)
Project #
5R35GM124593-02
Application #
9563304
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Maas, Stefan
Project Start
2017-09-11
Project End
2022-07-31
Budget Start
2018-08-01
Budget End
2019-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
078200995
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98109