黑腹果蝇作为营养基因组学的另一种模式生物。

Genes & Nutrition Pub Date : 2019-05-06 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s12263-019-0641-y
Nieves Baenas, Anika E Wagner
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引用次数: 21

摘要

营养基因组学解释了基因组、蛋白质组、表观基因组、代谢组和微生物组与生物体营养环境之间的相互作用。因此,它位于生物体的健康、饮食和基因组之间的界面。饮食和/或特定的饮食化合物不仅可以影响基因表达模式,还可以影响表观遗传机制,以及代谢物的产生和微生物群的细菌组成。在营养基因组学的背景下,黑腹果蝇提供了一个非常适合的模式生物来揭示这些相互作用,因为它结合了几个优点,包括负担得起的维护,短的世代时间,高繁殖力,相对较短的预期寿命,一个良好的特征基因组,以及几种突变蝇系的可用性。此外,它拥有一个类似哺乳动物的肠道系统,具有清晰的微生物群和类似于脂肪组织的脂肪体,具有相当于肝脏的卵细胞,这使得果蝇不仅在营养基因组学中而且在营养学研究中都是一个优秀的模式生物。营养基因组学研究所需要的实验方法,包括几种测序技术,已经在果蝇身上建立起来。然而,研究特定饮食和/或饮食化合物在苍蝇中的相互作用目前非常有限。本文综述了果蝇的形态学,包括肠道微生物群和作为免疫系统调节剂的抗菌肽。此外,本文还总结了果蝇的营养基因组学方法,有助于阐明宿主基因组与模式生物黑腹果蝇营养环境的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

<i>Drosophila melanogaster</i> as an alternative model organism in nutrigenomics.

Drosophila melanogaster as an alternative model organism in nutrigenomics.

Nutrigenomics explains the interaction between the genome, the proteome, the epigenome, the metabolome, and the microbiome with the nutritional environment of an organism. It is therefore situated at the interface between an organism's health, its diet, and the genome. The diet and/or specific dietary compounds are able to affect not only the gene expression patterns, but also the epigenetic mechanisms as well as the production of metabolites and the bacterial composition of the microbiota. Drosophila melanogaster provides a well-suited model organism to unravel these interactions in the context of nutrigenomics as it combines several advantages including an affordable maintenance, a short generation time, a high fecundity, a relatively short life expectancy, a well-characterized genome, and the availability of several mutant fly lines. Furthermore, it hosts a mammalian-like intestinal system with a clear microbiota and a fat body resembling the adipose tissue with liver-equivalent oenocytes, supporting the fly as an excellent model organism not only in nutrigenomics but also in nutritional research. Experimental approaches that are essentially needed in nutrigenomic research, including several sequencing technologies, have already been established in the fruit fly. However, studies investigating the interaction of a specific diet and/or dietary compounds in the fly are currently very limited. The present review provides an overview of the fly's morphology including the intestinal microbiome and antimicrobial peptides as modulators of the immune system. Additionally, it summarizes nutrigenomic approaches in the fruit fly helping to elucidate host-genome interactions with the nutritional environment in the model organism Drosophila melanogaster.

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