Title: Drosophila melanogaster
1Drosophila melanogaster
Source Zdenék Berger
2Mating
adult
Egg-laying
Life Cycle (10 days)
pupa
Embryo
larva
3Drosophila natural history
- Originated in Africa
- Probably spread by human activity
- Now found most places where we live
- Likes compost, rotting fruit, yeast
- Some features conserved, others a reflection of
its life strategy - Harmless (mostly)
- Most lab strains derived from isolates collected
before 1940s - Strains collected subsequently have P
transposable elements and cant easily be used
4Model Organisms - a trainspotters guide
5Where our pet flies live Mice -
75c/day 150k/yr Flies 20k/yr (consumables
and labour) Cant be stored frozen -(
Source John Roote
6What are flies useful for?
7Fly pushing
Early 1900s - Drosophila contributes to our
understanding of heredity Mid 1900s - Grows in
popularity among developmental biologists
Homozygous lethal mutations can be kept
indefinitely as heterozygous balanced
stocks 1970s - 1980s - Molecular biology,
cloning of Hsp, Hox 1970s - 1980s - Large
screens for developmental mutants 1982 -
Transformation by injection of marked P
transposable element into syncytial embryos
transgenic flies identified by marker in F1 1988
- Easy mobilisation of P made possible by stable
transposase-producing strains
8Recent articles from PubMed
9C.J. OKane (2003). Seminars in Cell and
Developmental Biology 143-10. Source Claude
Everaerts
10Whats different?
- More gene redundancy in humans mammals
- Some organisation of tissues and organs
- Cardiovascular system
- Acquired immunity (antibody response)
- Were studying them, instead of them studying us
11(No Transcript)
12Insertional mutagenesis many ways to kill a gene
13Fly Gene Disruption Projects
- Based on transposable element insertion
- Allows further local mutagenesis
- Non-directed - like Venters sequencing strategy
- Not random
- 15000 target genes
- include 4000 vital genes
- Requires 1 insertion per 8 kb
- Coverage perhaps 25 of that, more on their way
into public domain
14FlyBasewww.flybase.org
15Other ways to make mutants
- EMS - still has its attractions
- Targeted knockouts for reverse genetics
- Imprecise excisions for reverse genetics
- RNAi for reverse or forward genetics
- Deletion kits in defined backgrounds
- Ask a fellow flypusher
16Getting round early lethality
- GAL4 x UAS-X for targeted expressionCan be
used for regulated RNAi expression
17GAL4 enhancer traps
18Getting round early lethality
- GAL4 x UAS-X for targeted expression
- Enhancer/suppressor screens
19Identifying genes in receptor tyrosine kinase
signalling - screening for enhancers of
sevenlessts
20Getting round early lethality
- GAL4 x UAS-X for targeted expression
- Enhancer/suppressor screens
- Mitotic clones (using FLP recombinase)
21Mutant screens using mitotic clones
22Getting round early lethality
- GAL4 x UAS-X for targeted expression
- Enhancer/suppressor screens
- Mitotic clones (using FLP recombinase)
- Temperature-sensitive point mutations
- RNAi screens in cultured cells
23Shared biology - shared diseases
- Cancer
- Ageing
- Neurodegeneration
- Infectious disease
- Models for disease vectors
- Behaviour
24Flies and your disease
- Do flies have disease-gene homologs?
- Do flies have basic cellular processes related to
the disease? - Be nice to a friendly fly geneticist
25The future?
- More insertions
- UAS-RNAi collections
- SNPs, better mapping of point mutations
- Temperature-sensitive alleles for cell biology
- Screens take more work in flies than in worms
- Some things only possible in flies and not worms
- physiology, some development, some cell
biology - Hopping in takes about 20k investment, or a
friendly fly lab to drop in on