Mariana Wolfner Lab

166 Followers
163 Following
9 Posts
We study the reproductive and developmental processes that occur around fertilization in Drosophila at Cornell. Posts by the lab, Mariana's signed with MFW.
Lab websitehttps://wolfnerlab.wixsite.com/wolfnerlab
Twitter@wolfnerlab
Our second of two new preprints with us and the Clark lab, with Nora Brown, Ben Gordon, Caitlin McDonough-Goldstein, Snigdha Misra, and Geoff Findlay delves into the long-standing mystery concerning odorant binding proteins which are often found in insect seminal fluid, but have been totally functionally uncharacterized until now! We also take a look at their evolutionary histories and find significant evidence of co-option, duplication, and pseudogenization:
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.03.526941v1
Two new preprints out now from us and the Clark lab! The first, led by Yassi Hafezi (with expert help from Arsen Omurzakov, Jolie Carlisle, and Ian Caldas) seeks out to test the long standing hypothesis that Y-linked genes in Drosophila are important for sperm motility. Yassi did a beautiful job CRISPR editing one of the most notoriously difficult regions of the genome, and we found compelling evidence of functional shifts associated with Y-linkage in flies:
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.02.526876v1
New paper from our lab! 🚨📰 In flies, many post-mating changes in females are due to the action of Sex Peptide, a male derived seminal fluid protein (SFP), which binds to sperm and is slowly cleaved off inside the female. SP is loaded onto sperm with the help of other SFPs, but our brilliant postdoc Snigdha wanted to test whether female-derived molecules can help in this process too, which she tested by ablating various tissues in the female repro tract. Check it out!
https://bmcbiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12915-022-01465-2
Female factors modulate Sex Peptide’s association with sperm in Drosophila melanogaster - BMC Biology

Background Male-derived seminal fluid proteins (SFPs) that enter female fruitflies during mating induce a myriad of physiological and behavioral changes, optimizing fertility of the mating pair. Some post-mating changes in female Drosophila melanogaster persist for ~10–14 days. Their long-term persistence is because the seminal protein that induces these particular changes, the Sex Peptide (SP), is retained long term in females by binding to sperm, with gradual release of its active domain from sperm. Several other “long-term response SFPs” (LTR-SFPs) “prime” the binding of SP to sperm. Whether female factors play a role in this process is unknown, though it is important to study both sexes for a comprehensive physiological understanding of SFP/sperm interactions and for consideration in models of sexual conflict. Results We report here that sperm in male ejaculates bind SP more weakly than sperm that have entered females. Moreover, we show that the amount of SP, and other SFPs, bound to sperm increases with time and transit of individual seminal proteins within the female reproductive tract (FRT). Thus, female contributions are needed for maximal and appropriate binding of SP, and other SFPs, to sperm. Towards understanding the source of female molecular contributions, we ablated spermathecal secretory cells (SSCs) and/or parovaria (female accessory glands), which contribute secretory proteins to the FRT. We found no dramatic change in the initial levels of SP bound to sperm stored in mated females with ablated or defective SSCs and/or parovaria, indicating that female molecules that facilitate the binding of SP to sperm are not uniquely derived from SSCs and parovaria. However, we observed higher levels of SP (and sperm) retention long term in females whose SSCs and parovaria had been ablated, indicating secretions from these female tissues are necessary for the gradual release of Sex Peptide’s active region from stored sperm. Conclusion This study reveals that the SP-sperm binding pathway is not entirely male-derived and that female contributions are needed to regulate the levels of SP associated with sperm stored in their storage sites.

BioMed Central

Our new preprint on the deeply conserved structure, and evolution, of insect Gustatory and Odorant receptors. The plethora of chemosensors in insects may be the result of extreme and rapid diversification of a single branch of a diverse superfamily of Eukaryotic (including human!) receptors, dating to at least LECA. An exceptionally fun collaboration with @[email protected] come to fruition! https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.13.519744

#olfaction #taste #evolution #phylogenetics #LECA #trypanosoma #drosophila #AlphaFold

Hello Mastodon! #Introduction
We're the Wolfner lab at Cornell University (@wolfnerlab on Twitter), we use #Drosophila #genetics to study the events surrounding #fertilization and #reproduction . On the female side, we study #eggactivation and #development, and on the male side, we study #seminalproteins and #spermcompetition.
Follow along for lab news, papers, fly stuff, etc.!
Its #flyday and #fluorescentfriday, so here is a Drosophila intestine with stem and progenitor cells in orange.
A great new resource from #FlyBase - a wiki page for newcomers into the #Drosophila field:
https://wiki.flybase.org/wiki/FlyBase:New_to_Flies
FlyBase:New to Flies - FlyBase Wiki

Happy #FlyDay everyone! (11/18)

#Drosophila