TY - JOUR
T1 - Ecdysone coordinates plastic growth with robust pattern in the developing wing
AU - Alves, André Nogueira
AU - Oliveira, Marisa Mateus
AU - Koyama, Takashi
AU - Shingleton, Alexander
AU - Mirth, Christen Kerry
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Mirth and Shingleton labs, past and present, for their useful discussions relating to this project. We also thank the staff at the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ci?ncia-Advanced Imaging Lab and at Monash MicroImaging (MMI) for their technical support. This research was supported by NSF grants IOS-0919855, IOS-1557638, and IOS-1952385 to AWS and an ARC Future Fellowship (FT170100259) to CKM.
Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Mirth and Shingleton labs, past and present, for their useful discussions relating to this project. We also thank the staff at the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência - Advanced Imaging Lab and at Monash MicroImaging (MMI) for their technical support. This research was supported by NSF grants IOS-0919855, IOS-1557638, and IOS-1952385 to AWS and an ARC Future Fellowship (FT170100259) to CKM.
Publisher Copyright:
© Nogueira Alves et al.
PY - 2022/3/9
Y1 - 2022/3/9
N2 - Animals develop in unpredictable, variable environments. In response to environmental change, some aspects of development adjust to generate plastic phenotypes. Other aspects of development, however, are buffered against environmental change to produce robust phenotypes. How organ development is coordinated to accommodate both plastic and robust developmental responses is poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that the steroid hormone ecdysone coordinates both plasticity of organ size and robustness of organ pattern in the developing wings of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Using fed and starved larvae that lack prothoracic glands, which synthesize ecdysone, we show that nutrition regulates growth both via ecdysone and via an ecdysone-independent mechanism, while nutrition regulates patterning only via ecdysone. We then demonstrate that growth shows a graded response to ecdysone concentration, while patterning shows a threshold response. Collectively, these data support a model where nutritionally regulated ecdysone fluctuations confer plasticity by regulating disc growth in response to basal ecdysone levels and confer robustness by initiating patterning only once ecdysone peaks exceed a threshold concentration. This could represent a generalizable mechanism through which hormones coordinate plastic growth with robust patterning in the face of environmental change.
AB - Animals develop in unpredictable, variable environments. In response to environmental change, some aspects of development adjust to generate plastic phenotypes. Other aspects of development, however, are buffered against environmental change to produce robust phenotypes. How organ development is coordinated to accommodate both plastic and robust developmental responses is poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that the steroid hormone ecdysone coordinates both plasticity of organ size and robustness of organ pattern in the developing wings of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Using fed and starved larvae that lack prothoracic glands, which synthesize ecdysone, we show that nutrition regulates growth both via ecdysone and via an ecdysone-independent mechanism, while nutrition regulates patterning only via ecdysone. We then demonstrate that growth shows a graded response to ecdysone concentration, while patterning shows a threshold response. Collectively, these data support a model where nutritionally regulated ecdysone fluctuations confer plasticity by regulating disc growth in response to basal ecdysone levels and confer robustness by initiating patterning only once ecdysone peaks exceed a threshold concentration. This could represent a generalizable mechanism through which hormones coordinate plastic growth with robust patterning in the face of environmental change.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127317129&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7554/eLife.72666
DO - 10.7554/eLife.72666
M3 - Article
C2 - 35261337
AN - SCOPUS:85127317129
SN - 2050-084X
VL - 11
JO - eLife
JF - eLife
M1 - e72666
ER -