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Amelioration of Reproduction-Associated Oxidative Stress in a Viviparous Insect Is Critical to Prevent Reproductive Senescence

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Title Amelioration of Reproduction-Associated Oxidative Stress in a Viviparous Insect Is Critical to Prevent Reproductive Senescence
Names Michalkova, Veronika (creator)
Benoit, Joshua B. (creator)
Attardo, Geoffrey M. (creator)
Medlock, Jan (creator)
Aksoy, Serap (creator)
Date Issued 2014-04-24 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Public Library of Science. The published article can be found at: http://www.plosone.org/.
Abstract Impact of reproductive processes upon female health has yielded conflicting results; particularly in relation to the role of
reproduction-associated stress. We used the viviparous tsetse fly to determine if lactation, birth and involution lead to
damage from oxidative stress (OS) that impairs subsequent reproductive cycles. Tsetse females carry an intrauterine larva to
full term at each pregnancy cycle, and lactate to nourish them with milk secretions produced by the accessory gland ( = milk
gland) organ. Unlike most K-strategists, tsetse females lack an apparent period of reproductive senescence allowing the
production of 8–10 progeny over their entire life span. In a lactating female, over 47% of the maternal transcriptome is
associated with the generation of milk proteins. The resulting single larval offspring weighs as much as the mother at birth.
In studying this process we noted an increase in specific antioxidant enzyme (AOE) transcripts and enzymatic activity at
critical times during lactation, birth and involution in the milk gland/fat body organ and the uterus. Suppression of
superoxide dismutase (sod) decreased fecundity in subsequent reproductive cycles in young mothers and nearly abolished
fecundity in geriatric females. Loss of fecundity was in part due to the inability of the mother to produce adequate milk to
support larval growth. Longevity was also impaired after sod knockdown. Generation of OS in virgin females through
exogenous treatment with hydrogen peroxide at times corresponding to pregnancy intervals reduced survival, which was
exacerbated by sod knockdown. AOE expression may prevent oxidative damage associated with the generation of nutrients
by the milk gland, parturition and milk gland breakdown. Our results indicate that prevention of OS is essential for females
to meet the growing nutritional demands of juveniles during pregnancy and to repair the damage that occurs at birth. This
process is particularly important for females to remain fecund during the latter portion of their lifetime.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Identifier Michalkova V, Benoit JB, Attardo GM, Medlock J, Aksoy S (2014) Amelioration of Reproduction-Associated Oxidative Stress in a Viviparous Insect Is Critical to Prevent Reproductive Senescence. PLoS ONE 9(4): e87554. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0087554

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