Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Udaka Hiroko
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 7000009528
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

CRISPR-induced null alleles show that Frost protects Drosophila melanogaster reproduction after cold exposure

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Claire E. Newman
Jantina Toxopeus
Hiroko Udaka
Soohyun Ahn
David M. Martynowicz
Steffen P. Graether
Brent J. Sinclair
Anthony Percival-Smith

Summary

The ability to survive and reproduce after cold exposure is important in all kingdoms of life. However, even in a sophisticated genetic model system like Drosophila melanogaster, few genes have been identified as functioning in cold tolerance. The accumulation of the Frost (Fst) gene transcript increases after cold exposure, making it a good candidate for a gene that has a role in cold tolerance. Despite extensive RNAi knockdown analysis, no role in cold tolerance has been assigned to Fst. CRISPR is an effective technique for completely knocking down genes, and is less likely to produce offtarget effects than GAL4-UAS RNAi systems. We have used CRISPR-mediated homologous recombination to generate Fst-null alleles, and these Fst alleles uncovered a requirement for FST protein in maintaining female fecundity following cold exposure. However, FST does not have a direct role in survival following cold exposure. FST mRNA accumulates in the Malpighian tubules, and the FST protein is a highly disordered protein with a putative signal peptide for export from the cell. Future work is needed to determine whether FST is exported from the Malpighian tubules and directly interacts with female reproductive tissues post-cold exposure, or whether it is required for other repair/recovery functions that indirectly alter energy allocation to reproduction.

Magazine(name)

Journal of Experimental Biology

Publisher

 

Volume

220

Number Of Pages

18

StartingPage

3344

EndingPage

3354

Date of Issue

2017-09-15

Referee

Exist

Invited

 

Language

 

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1242/jeb.160176

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PMID

 

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arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID