Sign In

A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.

In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Protocol
  • Representative Results
  • Discussion
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

This report describes a method for measuring adult Drosophila melanogaster time to knockdown using a Drosophila Activity Monitor (DAM2) in response to an air conduction heat stressor within an incubator chamber. The DAM2 measures activity by recording individual fly movements as they cross an infrared beam. Data analysis is facilitated by a novel executable file created by the authors.

Abstract

The study of heat tolerance in Drosophila melanogaster has been of particular interest to researchers for decades, with a common approach to assessing heat tolerance being to monitor the time to knockdown (TKD) after exposure to an elevated temperature. Classically, flies are housed in individual vials and placed inside a heated water bath. TKD is then monitored manually by researchers. While very well-established, there remain problems of subjectivity and consistent application of a tangible definition of cessation of all movement, including muscular spasms, when implementing these manual assays. We have developed a high-throughput method for automating heat tolerance assays using the TriKinetics Drosophila Activity Monitors (DAM2). To accompany the DAM2 system, we have written a program and created an easy-use executable to automatically read the last time of movement from the activity data generated. This script then writes to a .csv file the time to heat paralysis (TKD) for each fly. Our data show that this automated DAM2 method is consistent and reliable. Meanwhile, activity profiles created from the activity count data are of interest. These activity profiles can be compiled and have the potential to expand heat tolerance assays to include the relatively unstudied behavioral components of heat tolerance. This protocol will describe in detail how to use the DAM2 system and the HoTDAM! software to estimate heat tolerance in D. melanogaster.

Introduction

Ectotherms typically respond to heat stress with increased locomotor activity. This phenomenon has been apparent to researchers for decades, with the characteristic behavioral response described by Cowles and Bogert in 19441. They described how an organism under heat stress will first show increased locomotor movement. As the heat stress builds, short bursts of activity are interspersed with periods of inactivity. The temperature at which the organism can no longer show coordinated movement is the critical thermal maximum (CTmax). Muscular spams follow, and ultimately the organism collapses1,....

Protocol

1. Fly husbandry

  1. Choose the appropriate fly stock/line for the investigation.
    NOTE: To illustrate the assay, we used the transient receptor potential TRPA1 knockout stock and its genetic control, the w1118 stock.
  2. Maintain the fly stocks under consistent conditions as appropriate. To follow this protocol, house stocks at 25 ˚C under a 12:12 diurnal cycle on standard food (cornmeal, molasses, and torula yeast).
  3. Separate males and fema.......

Representative Results

The analyses for TRPA1 and w1118 stocks were performed separately. Percentile TKD times and other descriptives can be found in Table 1.

Percentilesa
SexTreatment25.00%50.00%

Discussion

The heat tolerance assay method we describe here is versatile and scalable. We have previously published a validation study where we compared the HoTDAM! method to a classic, observation-based TKD assay and found the automated assay to give show the same general trend across several factors4 (Figure 3). In other words, in the same way as the classic manual TKD assay, the DAM2 automated assay was able to differentiate organisms by sex, assay temperature, hardening pret.......

Acknowledgements

The project described was supported by Institutional Development Award (IDeA) grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (5P20GM103427 and 1U54GM115458). The UNK Undergraduate Research Fellows Program and the UNMC Medical Student Summer Research Program.

....

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
14 mL polystyrene test tubesFalcon352057
30 gallon fish tankWal-mart
8 oz bottlesGenesee32-129F
Constant Climate ChamberMemmertHPP750eco
cornmealLab ScientificFLY801010
DAM2  Drosophila Activity MonitorTriKineticsDAM2(DAMSystem3 Data Sheet) https://www.trikinetics.com/Downloads/DAMSystem%20Price%20List%202024.7.pdf
DAMSystem data acquisition softwareTriKineticsfree download
Drosophila agarLab ScientificFLY80201
ethanolFisher ScientificBP82011
EtherFisher ScientificE134-4
FileScan softwareTriKineticsfor scanning for text errors, binning data, and output
FlyStuff Flugs for bottlesGenesee49-100
FlyStuff Flugs for vialsGenesee49-102
FlyStuff vialsGenesee32-113RL
HoTDAM softwareGithub or Trikineticshttps://github.com/MatthewR47/HoTDAM
Immersion circulating heaterPolyScienceMX-CA11B
molassesLab ScientificFLY80084
propionic acidFisher ScientificA258-500
Pyrex Glass tubes 5 x 65 mm for DAM2TriKineticsPGT 5x65https://www.trikinetics.com/Downloads/DAMSystem%20Price%20List%202024.7.pdf
small paint brushWal-mart
SPSS StatisticsIBM
tegoseptLab ScientificFLY55015
torula yeastMP Biomedicals290308505
TRPA1 mutant stockBloomington Stock center26504w[1118]; TI{w[+mW.hs]=TI}TrpA1[1]
w1118 stockBloomington Stock center3605

References

  1. Cowles, R. B., Bogert, C. M. A preliminary study of the thermal requirements of desert reptiles. Bull Am Mus Nat Hist. 83, 261-296 (1944).
  2. Lutterschmidt, W. I., Hutchison, V. H. The critical thermal maximum: history and critique. <....

This article has been published

Video Coming Soon

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2024 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved