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Tryptophan regulates Drosophila zinc stores.

Erika GarayNils SchuthAlessandra BarbanenteCarlos Tejeda-GuzmánDaniele VitoneBeatriz OsorioAdam H ClarkMaarten NachtegaalMichael HaumannHolger DauAlberto VelaFabio ArnesanoLiliana QuintanarFanis Missirlis
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Zinc deficiency is commonly attributed to inadequate absorption of the metal. Instead, we show that body zinc stores in Drosophila melanogaster depend on tryptophan consumption. Hence, a dietary amino acid regulates zinc status of the whole insect—a finding consistent with the widespread requirement of zinc as a protein cofactor. Specifically, the tryptophan metabolite kynurenine is released from insect fat bodies and induces the formation of zinc storage granules in Malpighian tubules, where 3-hydroxykynurenine and xanthurenic acid act as endogenous zinc chelators. Kynurenine functions as a peripheral zinc-regulating hormone and is converted into a 3-hydroxykynurenine–zinc–chloride complex, precipitating within the storage granules. Thus, zinc and the kynurenine pathway—well-known modulators of immunity, blood pressure, aging, and neurodegeneration—are physiologically connected.
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