1. Identification of two cationic amino acid transporters required for nutritional signaling during mosquito reproduction.
- Author
-
Attardo GM, Hansen IA, Shiao SH, and Raikhel AS
- Subjects
- Aedes physiology, Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic genetics, Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic metabolism, Amino Acids metabolism, Amino Acids physiology, Animals, Cloning, Molecular, Egg Proteins genetics, Egg Proteins metabolism, Fat Body metabolism, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Insect Proteins genetics, Insect Proteins metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Protein Precursors genetics, Protein Precursors metabolism, RNA Interference, Reproduction physiology, Vitellogenesis physiology, Aedes metabolism, Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic physiology, Insect Proteins physiology, Signal Transduction physiology
- Abstract
The defining characteristic of anautogenous mosquitoes is their requirement for a blood meal to initiate reproduction. The need for blood drives the association of vector and host, and is the primary reason why anautogenous mosquitoes are effective disease vectors. During mosquito vitellogenesis, a key process in reproduction, yolk protein precursor (YPP) gene expression is activated specifically in the fat body, the insect analogue of the vertebrate liver. We have demonstrated that blood meal derived amino acids (AAs) activate YPP genes via the target of rapamycin (TOR)-signal transduction pathway. Here we show, by stimulating fat bodies with balanced AA solutions lacking individual AAs, that specific cationic and branched AAs are essential for activation of the vitellogenin (vg) gene, the major YPP gene. Treatment of fat bodies with AA uptake inhibitors results in a strong inhibition of AA-induced vg gene expression proving that an active transport mechanism is necessary to transduce the AA signal. We identified two cationic AA transporters (CATs) in the fat body of Aedes aegypti females--Aa slimfast and iCAT2. RNAi knockdown of slimfast and iCAT2 results in a strong decrease in the response to AAs by the vg gene similar to that seen due to TOR inhibition. These data demonstrate that active uptake of specific AAs plays a key role in nutritional signaling during the onset of vitellogenic gene expression in mosquitoes and it is mediated by two cationic AA transporters.
- Published
- 2006
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