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Letters to Nature
Nature 431, 316-320 (16 September 2004) | doi:10.1038/nature02897; Received 12 May 2004; Accepted 27 July 2004
Conserved mechanisms of glucose sensing and regulation by Drosophila corpora cardiaca cells
Seung K. Kim1 & Eric J. Rulifson2
- Departments of Developmental Biology and Medicine (Oncology Division), Stanford University School of Medicine, Beckman Center B300, Stanford, California 94305-5329, USA
- Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 1214 BRB II/III, 421 Curie Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6058, USA
Correspondence to: Seung K. Kim1 Email: seungkim@cmgm.stanford.edu
Abstract
Antagonistic activities of glucagon and insulin control metabolism in mammals, and disruption of this balance underlies diabetes pathogenesis. Insulin-producing cells (IPCs) in the brain of insects such as Drosophila also regulate serum glucose1, 2, but it remains unclear whether insulin is the sole hormonal regulator of glucose homeostasis and whether mechanisms of glucose-sensing and response in IPCs resemble those in pancreatic islets. Here we show, by targeted cell ablation, that Drosophila corpora cardiaca (CC) cells3, 4, 5 of the ring gland are also essential for larval glucose homeostasis. Unlike IPCs, CC cells express Drosophila cognates of sulphonylurea receptor (Sur) and potassium channel (Ir), proteins that comprise ATP-sensitive potassium channels regulating hormone secretion by islets and other mammalian glucose-sensing cells6, 7, 8. They also produce adipokinetic hormone, a polypeptide with glucagon-like functions. Glucose regulation by CC cells is impaired by exposure to sulphonylureas, drugs that target the Sur subunit. Furthermore, ubiquitous expression of an akh transgene reverses the effect of CC ablation on serum glucose. Thus, Drosophila CC cells are crucial regulators of glucose homeostasis and they use glucose-sensing and response mechanisms similar to islet cells.
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