Evolutionary Conservation of the Effects of Sex and Age in the Drosophila Metabolome
Avani Mital, Jessica Hoffman, Ben Harrison, Daniel Raftery, Daniel Promislow

TL;DR
This study explores how sex and age affect metabolism in fruit flies across species, finding that sex-related metabolic differences are evolutionarily conserved.
Contribution
The study reveals that sex-specific metabolic regulation is deeply conserved across Drosophila species and age groups.
Findings
Male and female metabolomic profiles are highly correlated across species, with slight weakening with age.
Numerous metabolites remain consistently sexually dimorphic across species and age groups.
Evolutionarily conserved metabolomic patterns provide insights into sex differences in aging traits.
Abstract
Sex plays a crucial role in aging, influencing health trajectories, longevity, and disease susceptibility. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of these sex differences, and the extent to which they are evolutionarily conserved, remains a key challenge in aging research. Metabolites, the small molecules that mediate biochemical processes and link genetic variation with phenotypic traits, offer a powerful lens through which to explore sex-specific biology. Using a comparative framework across 11 Drosophila species, representing 50 million years of evolution, we investigate sex differences in the metabolome of young and old flies to identify patterns of age- and sex-related metabolomic changes. We find that male and female metabolomic profiles are highly correlated with each other across species, with this correlation weakening slightly with age. Despite this, numerous metabolites…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInvertebrate Immune Response Mechanisms · Neurobiology and Insect Physiology Research · Physiological and biochemical adaptations
