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Octopamine Drives Endurance Exercise Adaptations in Drosophila.

Citation
Sujkowski, A., et al. “Octopamine Drives Endurance Exercise Adaptations In Drosophila.”. Cell Reports, pp. 1809-1823.
Center University of Michigan
Author Alyson Sujkowski, Divya Ramesh, Axel Brockmann, Robert Wessells
Keywords Drosophila, Adaptation, Endurance, Exercise, Negative geotaxis, octopamine, Sexual dimorphism
Abstract

Endurance exercise is an effective therapeutic intervention with substantial pro-healthspan effects. Male Drosophila respond to a ramped daily program of exercise by inducing conserved physiological responses similar to those seen in mice and humans. Female flies respond to an exercise stimulus but do not experience the adaptive training response seen in males. Here, we use female flies as a model to demonstrate that differences in exercise response are mediated by differences in neuronal activity. The activity of octopaminergic neurons is specifically required to induce the conserved cellular and physiological changes seen following endurance training. Furthermore, either intermittent, scheduled activation of octopaminergic neurons or octopamine feeding is able to fully substitute for exercise, conferring a suite of pro-healthspan benefits to sedentary Drosophila. These experiments indicate that octopamine is a critical mediator of adaptation to endurance exercise in Drosophila.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
21
Issue
7
Number of Pages
1809-1823
Date Published
11/2017
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2017.10.065
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
29141215
PMCID
PMC5693351
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