Adverse impact of female reproductive signaling on age-dependent neurodegeneration after mild head trauma in Drosophila

Author:

Ye Changtian1ORCID,Ho Ryan2,Moberg Kenneth H1ORCID,Zheng James Q134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology, Emory University School of Medicine

2. College of Art and Science, Emory University

3. Department of Neurology, Emory University School of Medicine

4. Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Emory University School of Medicine

Abstract

Environmental insults, including mild head trauma, significantly increase the risk of neurodegeneration. However, it remains challenging to establish a causative connection between early-life exposure to mild head trauma and late-life emergence of neurodegenerative deficits, nor do we know how sex and age compound the outcome. Using a Drosophila model, we demonstrate that exposure to mild head trauma causes neurodegenerative conditions that emerge late in life and disproportionately affect females. Increasing age-at-injury further exacerbates this effect in a sexually dimorphic manner. We further identify sex peptide signaling as a key factor in female susceptibility to post-injury brain deficits. RNA sequencing highlights a reduction in innate immune defense transcripts specifically in mated females during late life. Our findings establish a causal relationship between early head trauma and late-life neurodegeneration, emphasizing sex differences in injury response and the impact of age-at-injury. Finally, our findings reveal that reproductive signaling adversely impacts female response to mild head insults and elevates vulnerability to late-life neurodegeneration.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Reference93 articles.

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4. The ageing brain: molecular and cellular basis of neurodegeneration;Azam;Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology,2021

5. Using Drosophila as an integrated model to study mild repetitive traumatic brain injury;Barekat;Scientific Reports,2016

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