Cell Metabolism
Volume 32, Issue 5, 3 November 2020, Pages 786-800.e7
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Article
Insulin and Leptin/Upd2 Exert Opposing Influences on Synapse Number in Fat-Sensing Neurons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2020.08.017Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The adipokine leptin/Upd2 reduces inhibitory input to insulin-producing cells

  • Arouser, basigin, and gelsolin underpin Upd2-dependent reduction in synapse number

  • Synapse reduction occurs in response to surplus nutrition

  • Insulin resets negative tone by increasing the number of inhibitory contacts

Summary

Energy-sensing neural circuits decide to expend or conserve resources based, in part, on the tonic, steady-state, energy-store information they receive. Tonic signals, in the form of adipose tissue-derived adipokines, set the baseline level of activity in the energy-sensing neurons, thereby providing context for interpretation of additional inputs. However, the mechanism by which tonic adipokine information establishes steady-state neuronal function has heretofore been unclear. We show here that under conditions of nutrient surplus, Upd2, a Drosophila leptin ortholog, regulates actin-based synapse reorganization to reduce bouton number in an inhibitory circuit, thus establishing a neural tone that is permissive for insulin release. Unexpectedly, we found that insulin feeds back on these same inhibitory neurons to conversely increase bouton number, resulting in maintenance of negative tone. Our results point to a mechanism by which two surplus-sensing hormonal systems, Upd2/leptin and insulin, converge on a neuronal circuit with opposing outcomes to establish energy-store-dependent neuron activity.

Keywords

Drosophila
JAK-STAT
Upd2
leptin
insulin
inhibitory tone
energy homeostasis
arouser
actin
gelsolin
basigin

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