Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is associated with impaired social and communicative behavior and the emergence of repetitive behavior. For studying the interrelation between ASD genes and behavioral deficits in the Drosophila model, five behavioral paradigms are described in this paper for assaying social spacing, aggression, courtship, grooming, and habituation behavior.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) encompasses a heterogeneous group of neurodevelopmental disorders with common behavioral symptoms including deficits in social interaction and ability for communication, enhanced restricted or repetitive behaviors, and also, in some cases, learning disability and motor deficit. Drosophila has served as an unparalleled model organism for modeling a great number of human diseases. As many genes have been implicated in ASD, fruit flies have emerged as a powerful and efficient way to test the genes putatively involved with the disorder. As hundreds of genes, with varied functional roles, are implicated in ASD, a single genetic fly model of ASD is unfeasible; instead, individual genetic mutants, gene knockdowns, or overexpression-based studies of the fly homologs of ASD-associated genes are the common means for gaining insight regarding molecular pathways underlying these gene products. A host of behavioral techniques are available in Drosophila which provide easy readout of deficits in specific behavioral components. Social space assay and aggression and courtship assays in flies have been shown to be useful in assessing defects in social interaction or communication. Grooming behavior in flies is an excellent readout of repetitive behavior. Habituation assay is used in flies to estimate the ability for habituation learning, which is found to be affected in some ASD patients. A combination of these behavioral paradigms can be utilized to make a thorough assessment of the human ASD-like disease state in flies. Using Fmr1 mutant flies, recapitulating Fragile-X syndrome in humans, and POGZ-homolog row knockdown in fly neurons, we have shown quantifiable deficits in social spacing, aggression, courtship behavior, grooming behavior, and habituation. These behavioral paradigms are demonstrated here in their simplest and straightforward forms with an assumption that it would facilitate their widespread use for research on ASD and other neurodevelopmental disorders in fly models.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) encompasses a heterogeneous group of neurological disorders. It includes a range of complex neuro-developmental disorders characterized by multi-contextual and persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction and the presence of restricted, repetitive behavioral and activity patterns and interests1. According to World Health Organization (WHO), 1 in 100 children is diagnosed with ASD worldwide with a male-to-female ratio of 4.22. The disease becomes evident in the second or third year of life. ASD children show a lack of interest in social-emotional reciprocity, non-verbal communication, and relationship skills. They exhibit repetitive behaviors like stereotyped motor movement, inflexible and ritualized routine following, and intense focus on restricted interests. ASD children show a high degree of response towards touch, smell, sound, and taste whereas pain and temperature response is comparatively low1. The penetrance of this disorder is also different among different patients suffering from ASD and hence, the variability increases.
Current clinical diagnosis of ASD is based on behavioral assessment of the individuals as there is no confirmatory biomarker-based or common genetic test that covers all forms of ASD3. Deciphering the genetic and neurophysiological bases would be helpful in targeting treatment strategies. In the last decade, a large body of research has resulted in the identification of hundreds of genes that are either deleted or mutated or whose expression levels are altered in ASD patients. Ongoing research emphasizes the validation of the contribution of these candidate genes using model organisms like the mouse or fruit-fly, in which, these genes are knocked out or knocked down followed by tests for ASD-like behavioral deficits and elucidation of underlying genetic and molecular pathways causing the anomalies. A mouse model recapitulating Copy Number Variations (CNVs) in the human chromosomal loci 16p11.2 shows some of the ASD behavioral defects4,5,6. Prenatal exposure to a teratogenic drug valproic acid (VPA) is another mouse model depicting traits resembling human ASD7,8. In addition, there exists a range of mouse models that exhibit genetic syndrome-associated autism, for example, single-gene syndromic models caused by mutations in Fmr1, Pten, Mecp2, Cacna1c, and single-gene non-syndromic models caused by mutations in genes like Cntnap2, Shank, Neurexin, or Neuroligin genes5.
Fruit-fly (Drosophila melanogaster) is another prominent model organism for studying the cellular, molecular, and genetic bases of a plethora of human disorders9, including ASD. Drosophila and humans share highly conserved biological processes at the molecular, cellular, and synaptic levels. Fruit-flies have been used successfully in ASD studies10,11,12 to characterize genes linked to ASDs and decipher their exact role in synaptogenesis, synaptic function and plasticity, neural circuit assembly, and maturation; fly homologs of ASD-associated genes were found to have roles in the regulation of social and/or repetitive behavior11,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21. The fruit-fly has also worked as a model for the screening of ASD genes and their variants15,22,23. The biggest challenge in ASD research in flies is that, unlike other disease models, there is no single ASD fly model. To understand the impact of mutations or knocking down of a specific ASD gene, a researcher needs to validate whether the behavioral phenotypes sufficiently mimic the symptoms of ASD patients and then, proceed towards understanding the molecular or physiological underpinnings of the phenotypes.
Hence, the detection of ASD-like phenotypes is vital to ASD research in the fly model. A handful of behavioral techniques have emerged over the years that enable us to detect abnormalities like deficits in social behavior/interaction, communication, repetitive behaviors, and responsiveness to stimuli. In addition, several modifications and upgrades of these behavioral techniques have been made in different labs to suit specific requirements such as upscaling, automation of assays, readouts, quantification, and comparison methods. In this video article, the most basic versions of five behavioral paradigms are demonstrated, which, in combination, can be used to detect ASD-like behavioral outcomes in the easiest way.
Aggression is an evolutionarily conserved innate behavior affecting survival and reproduction24. Aggressive behavior towards conspecifics is influenced by 'motivation for socialization'25,26 as well as 'communication'27, both being compromised in ASD-affected individuals. Aggressive behavior is well described in Drosophila and its quantifiability through the robust aggression assay28,29,30 and a well-understood genetic and neurobiological basis31 makes it a suitable behavioral paradigm32 for assessing the ASD phenotype in a fly model. Aggression is affected by social isolation away from a social environment, which leads to enhanced aggression; the same has been observed when male flies are housed in isolation for a few days33,34. Another behavioral assay that quantifies sociability in flies is the Social Space Assay35, which measures distances between nearest neighbors and interfly distances in a small group of flies, making it perfectly suited for testing the roles of ASD gene orthologs in fly12,21,36,37 as well as environmentally induced ASD fly models38,39.
The Drosophila courtship assay is another behavioral paradigm frequently used to assay for alteration in social and communication skills upon circuit or genetic manipulation, including Autism related genes18,19,21,40. Repetitive patterns of behavior are prevalent in ASD patients, which is recapitulated in flies by grooming behavior-a series of distinct, stereotyped actions performed for cleaning and other purpose. It has been successfully used to assay for the impact of ASD gene mutations in flies21,41 as well as exposure to chemicals38,39. Multiple advancements and automation in the assay have been described before16,41,42,43; here, we are demonstrating the most basic assay pattern, which is easy to adopt and quantify.
ASD is known to impact the ability for habituation, learning, and memory in some patients44,45,46,47,48,49,50, ASD model organisms51,52 and also causes deficits in different olfactory behaviors50. Drosophila light-off jump habituation has been used previously to screen for ASD genes23. Habituation can be assayed by a simple method of olfactory habituation assay53,54,55. We describe the method to induce olfactory habituation and assay the outcome using a classic Y-maze-based binary odor-choice assay56 that can be used to detect defects in habituation in ASD gene mutant or gene knockdown condition. To assess whether the impact of a mutation (or gene knock-down) or a pharmacological treatment on the behavior of a fly amounts to an ASD-like phenotype, one can use a combination of these 5 assays described here.
See the Table of Materials for details related to all materials and reagents used in this protocol.
1. Aggression assay
2. Social space assay
NOTE: The assay protocol, arena, and analysis described here have been described previously60,61.
3. Courtship assay
4. Grooming behavior assay
5. Assay for olfactory habituation
NOTE: As shown in Figure 5, the final assembly needs to be done on the day of Y-maze assay54,56.
Aggression assay
As a fly ASD model, Fmr1 mutant flies have been used63,64. w1118 males were used as control and Fmr1 trans-heterozygote Fmr1Δ113M/Fmr1Δ50M57 male flies as experimental flies; adult males were housed in isolation tubes for 5 days. Homotypic males (same genotype, same housing conditions) were introduced in the aggression arena and their behavior was recorded for 20 min. The total number of aggressive bouts in 20 min were counted for each genotype. The number of aggressive bouts during 20 min was found to be significantly reduced in the case of mutant males than in the control males (Figure 1E). This reduced aggressiveness in Fmr1 flies could be due to reduced interest in social interaction with another fly. In contrast, group/socially housed Fmr1 mutant male flies show comparable aggression bout counts as that of socially housed w1118 flies (data not shown), probably indicating a positive role of the social environment in the induction of social behavior.
Social Space assay
The social space assay was performed in w1118 and ASD model (Fmr1Δ113M/Fmr1Δ50M) flies. The distance to the closest neighbor was calculated for each fly and 10 biological replicates were performed for each genotype. The mutant flies show significantly higher nearest-neighbor distances than the control counterparts (Figure 2D), indicating a preference for greater distancing from other flies.
Courtship assay
The courtship assay of single-housed male flies was performed to quantify the innate courtship behavior of two separate ASD model flies. First, the courtship behavior of Fmr1 transheterozygous flies was compared with that of w1118; Fmr1 flies showed a significantly lower courtship index as well as a reduced number of attempts to copulation (Figure 3E1). In a second experiment, row, a Drosophila ortholog of the human POGZ gene (a highly prevalent ASD risk gene20, was knocked down by expressing a short-hairpin microRNA against row in mushroom body neurons using the MB247-GAL4 driver line. These row-knockdown ASD model flies were tested for any defect in the innate courtship pattern; the courtship index and attempted copulation number were calculated from 15 min videos. The row knockdown flies showed a significantly reduced courtship index as well as counts of attempted copulation (Figure 3E2), indicating their defective communication towards females.
Grooming behavior
Grooming behavior is used as a readout for repetitive behavior in Drosophila16,42,43. Grooming behavior was quantified in Fmr1 transheterozygote flies and compared with that of w1118. Latency to first grooming is significantly decreased in Fmr1 flies whereas the mean grooming bout duration and grooming index are significantly increased in Fmr1 flies (Figure 4C), indicating enhanced grooming (or repetitive) behavior in ASD model flies. In contrast, the total number of grooming bouts in the mutant flies was not found to be altered significantly compared to that of control flies.
Olfactory Habituation assay
Habituation is found to be defective in a large number of autistic individuals and it can be used as an assay for the same in Drosophila23. Here, olfactory habituation was tested in the ASD model by knocking down row in olfactory local interneurons driven by LN1-GAL4. An aversive odorant, 20% ethyl butyrate, has been used in these experiments to induce habituation in these flies. The results show that row-knockdown flies did not get habituated after a 3-day odorant exposure, (the last two bars in the graph in Figure 5E do not show a significant difference between naïve vs habituated flies) compared to wild type, flies which show typical habituation after exposure to ethyl butyrate for 3 days (exposed flies show significant drop in performance index compared to naïve flies). This indicates that row-knockdown flies do not get habituated after exposure to ethyl butyrate for 3 days and are repelled by the repulsive odorant, proving these ASD flies to be habituation-deficient.
Figure 1: Aggression arena and representative behavioral patterns. (A) The aggression arena setup in a 24-well plate with a perforated lid for fly entry. Inset: Dimensions of a single arena with fly food in it. (B) Photograph of a single-housing tube containing a single, isolated male fly and a group-housing vial containing male and female flies, recapitulating a social environment. (C) An aspirator for mouth aspiration-based transfer of flies. Items required for assembling a fly aspirator indicating the sides of the tube for fly entry (fly end) and the side that would be inserted into the mouth (mouth end) (C1) and an assembled fly aspirator (C2). (D) Representative male-male aggressive behavioral patterns: approach, wing-threat, fencing, holding, lunging, boxing, and tussling. (E) Fmr1 mutant male flies show reduced aggressive behavior towards other males compared to controls. Box plot showing the number of aggressive bouts for socially isolated males of w1118 (control) versus Fmr1 trans-heterozygous flies (Fmr1Δ113M/Fmr1Δ50M). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Social space assay arena setup. (A) Diagram showing dimensions and arrangement of glass panes and acrylic spacers. (B) The final arrangement of the arena components where the acrylic spacers are sandwiched between the glass pieces, leaving a small gap for fly entry at the bottom. The triangular space created between glass pieces and spacers is the SSA arena for the flies, here flies are only able to move in two dimensions. (C) Photograph of the final SSA arena setup with flies inside the chamber. Abbreviation: SSA = social space array. (D) ASD model (Fmr1 transheterozygous) flies show increased distancing from each other in the social space assay compared to w1118. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Courtship arena and representative behavioral patterns. Diagrams showing (A) design and (B) arrangement of the disks in a courtship assay arena. (C) Photo of the courtship arena after final arrangement. (D) Representative images showing courtship behavioral patterns of a naïve male towards a mated female: chasing, orientation, wing flickering, licking, attempt to copulation, and copulation. (E) Plots showing courtship index and number of attempted copulations in two ASD models: (E1) Fmr1 mutant flies showing significant reduction in courtship index and attempt for copulation compared to w1118 control. (E2) row knockdown flies were used as another ASD model where row-shRNA was expressed in mushroom body neurons (MB247-GAL4); a significant reduction in courtship behavior was observed upon row knockdown. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Arena setup and representative behavioral patterns of grooming behavior. (A) The disk or wheel-shaped arena (same courtship arena shown in Figure 3) is set up on an LED panel with a diffuser for uniform illumination from the bottom and video was captured from the top. This ensures a higher contrast required for identifying fine movement of appendages during grooming. (B) Photographs of grooming behavior patterns observed in adult male flies. T1 = 1st pair of legs, T2 = 2nd pair of legs, T3 = third pair of legs. Intuitive abbreviated nomenclature is used for grooming patterns in B: T1-head= head rubbed with first legs; T1-T1 = first pair of legs rubbed together, and so on. Abbreviation: LED = light-emitting diode. (C) Graphs showing grooming assay results performed in Fmr1 trans-heterozygous flies and compared with w1118. Fmr1 mutant flies showed significantly reduced latency for the first grooming bout indicating the early start of grooming compared with the control. Moreover, mean grooming bout duration and grooming index were significantly increased in Fmr1 mutants, indicative of enhanced repetitive behavior in ASD model flies. In contrast, the total number of grooming bouts was not altered significantly in the mutant flies compared to the control. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Induction and assay setup for olfactory habituation and representative outcome after the assay. (A) Components of the binary odor choice assay setup: (A1) the Y-maze, (A2) the adapter, (A3) the arrangement of these two, (A4) a pair of collection tubes for attaching at the top of the Y-maze arms, (A5) the glass bottle and glass tubes for keeping the odorant solution or water through which air will bubble before passing on to the Y-maze. (B) Fly food bottle setup for induction of olfactory habituation; cartoon diagram (B1) shows how the odorant-containing microfuge tube is hung from a copper wire midway inside the bottle; (B2) finally, the opening of the bottle is covered by cotton and sealed by brown paper envelops. (C) Photo of the total arrangement of the Y-maze setup. (D) Photographs showing the distribution of flies in collection chambers after the end of an experiment. (D1) Naïve flies (exposed to odorless paraffin only, control) show repulsion toward the aversive odorant (20% ethyl butyrate used for induction of habituation in this study) and choose in the arm of the Y-maze filled with regular air whereas (D2) exposed (habituated) flies distribute evenly in both the arms. Abbreviation: ID = internal diameter. (E) Olfactory habituation assay results of row-knockdown flies showed habituation defect. Wild type (Canton S) flies, after 3-day exposure to ethyl butyrate, showed a significant reduction in performance index compared to naïve flies, indicative of habituation. When progenies of LN1-GAL4 x row-shRNA flies were exposed for 3 days, the performance index was not found to be significantly different from that of naïve flies; this demonstrates that these row-knockdown flies did not get habituated upon 3-day exposure to odorant, recapitulating a human ASD-like symptom. Abbreviations: ASD = autism spectrum disorder; shRNA = short hairpin RNA. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Drosophila is used as a fine model organism for research in human neurological disorders due to a high degree of conservation of gene sequences between fly and human disease genes9. Numerous robust behavioral paradigms make it an attractive model for studying phenotypes manifested in mutants recapitulating human diseases. As hundreds of genes are implicated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), no common ASD model exists in any model organism. Hence, for each mutant, researchers must first establish ASD-like phenotypes in the fly. In this paper, we have tried to streamline the process by proposing the use of five fly behavioral paradigms in concert for such assessment. These paradigms are employed in flies to assess major and commonly occurring behavioral deficits of human ASD patients: social and communication deficits, enhancement of repetitive behaviors, and a habituation defect. If a fly gene mutation shows defects in all or most of these five paradigms, it could be a strong indication of an ASD-like scenario.
Most of the behavioral paradigms described here have been used multiple times in previous literature for solving diverse research questions. It is not uncommon to find variations in the techniques among different studies. The tweaks in the techniques were made to match the research need and to suit the demand of the specific question being solved. For example, in the courtship assay, innate as well as learned courtship behavior can be quantified towards a tester fly which can be an immature male65, a virgin female66,67, a premated female68,69,70, a freeze-killed virgin female65, or even a decapitated female19. In the method described in this paper, wild type pre-mated females have been used as a tester to check the courtship pattern of a male ASD model fly. The sexual receptivity of a premated female is relatively lower than that of a virgin fly71. As a result, the number of male courtship bouts and their duration are more towards a mated female than towards a virgin; similarly, the latency to copulation is also longer than those of virgin tester females in which case early copulation leads to reduced courtship index, reducing the scope for effective comparison between genotypes. Hence, the use of premated female as tester provides a better comparative analysis of courtship behavior of an ASD fly vs a wild type fly. On the other hand, the use of virgin females may provide additional information that may be masked when mated females are used. The use of mated females may also influence and alter male courtship behavior. In sum, it is suggested that researchers choose their experimental strategy and detail depending on the necessity of the specific experiment.
One needs to be cautious here before applying the technique in any or all fly homologs of ASD genes. All these behavioral paradigms are regulated by a specific and small number of neurons. Expression of a certain gene must be established first before proceeding to a specific behavioral paradigm. For example, if the fly homolog of an ASD-associated gene is not expressed in mushroom body neurons or glutamatergic neurons, then courtship and grooming behavior may not be affected in its mutant.
Another point researchers need to be careful about is that the lack of a defect does not always mean that the mutation has no role. For example, in the grooming behavior experiments with Fmr1 mutants, the total grooming bout count is not significantly lower in mutants than in controls, whereas other parameters like grooming index, etc. demonstrate a defect in grooming behavior. This may be explained by the prolongation of each grooming bout in Fmr1 mutants, resulting in a low count of the total bout number despite the total bout duration being much higher. This stresses the need for quantification of multiple parameters for each behavioral pattern. Moreover, it must be remembered that the term ASD covers a broad range of diseases caused by variations in any one of the hundreds of genes, resulting in heterogeneous phenotypes with various degrees of penetrance among the affected individuals. For example, habituation deficit is observed in some patients but not in all. The same would be expected in fly models of the disease.
For the analysis of aggressive behavior, different types of aggressive parameters were taken into account in this study: lunging, wing threat, tussling, etc. (Figure 1)30. Each bout needs to be identified and counted either as an individual bout type or as a total bout count. It is important to first get acquainted with the aggression patterns of male flies, which are described in59,72 and shown in Figure 1. While counting aggressive bout numbers, the start and end points of a single aggression event need to be clearly identified; multiple types of aggression patterns might be shown within a single bout, followed by the end of the bout. An aggression bout is considered over when a fly either stops showing any of the aggressive behaviors or movement for 2 s or stops the bout and starts walking away.
Most of these behavioral paradigms have multiple variations and advancements described by multiple laboratories. Each of the specific modifications had been created to meet the needs of a specific purpose. Similarly, automated and algorithm-based quantification or analysis techniques have freed these techniques from the chances of manual errors. In this paper, the most basic techniques have been demonstrated with the least amount of material requirements, in the hope that these techniques can be easily adopted and used by the maximum number of researchers.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We are immensely thankful to Mani Ramaswami (NCBS, Bangalore) and Baskar Bakthavachalu (IIT Mandi) for the habituation and odor choice assay setup, Pavan Agrawal (MAHE) for his valuable suggestions on the aggression assay, Amitava Majumdar (NCCS, Pune) for sharing his courtship assay chamber prototype and Fmr1 mutant fly lines, and Gaurav Das (NCCS, Pune) for sharing the MB247-GAL4 line. We thank Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (BDSC, Indiana, USA), National Institute of Genetics (NIG, Kyoto, Japan), Banaras Hindu University (BHU, Varanasi, India), and National Center for Biological Science (NCBS, Bangalore, India) for Drosophila lines. Work in the laboratory was supported by grants from SERB-DST (ECR/2017/002963) to AD, DBT Ramalingaswami fellowship awarded to AD (BT/RLF/Re-entry/11/2016), and institutional support from IIT Kharagpur, India. SD and SM receive Ph.D. fellowships from CSIR-Senior Research Fellowship; PM receives a Ph.D. fellowship from MHRD, India.
Aggression arena: | |||
Standard 24-well plate made of transparent polystyrene | 12 cm x 8 cm x 2 cm. Diameter of a single well= 18 cm. Sigma-aldrich #Z707791; depth = 1 cm | ||
Transparent plastic/acrylic sheet | Alternative: a perforated lid of a cell culture plate | ||
Social Space Assay: | |||
Binder clips | 19 mm | ||
Glass sheets and acrylic sheets of customized sizes | Thickness = 5 mm | ||
Courtship assay: | |||
Nut and bolt with threading | |||
Perspex sheets of customized shapes | i) Lid: A custom-made round transparent Perspex disk (2-3 mm thickness, 70 mm diameter) with one loading hole at the peripheral region and another screw hole at the center (diameter ~ 3 mm for each); ii) A second transparent thicker Perspex disk (3-4 mm thickness, 70 mm diameter), with 6-8 perforations of diameter 15 mm, equidistant from the center; iii) Base: Same as lid except without the loading hole | ||
Grooming assay: | |||
Diffused glass-covered LED panel | 10–15-Watt ceiling mountable LED panel | ||
Habituation and Y-maze assay | |||
Climbing chambers | x2, Borosilicate glass | ||
Adapter for connecting Y-maze with entry vial | Perspex, custom made, measurements in Figure 5A | ||
Clear reagent bottles | Borosil #1500017 | ||
Gas washing stopper | Borosil #1761021 | ||
Glass vial | OD= 25 mm x Height= 85 mm; Borosilicate Glass | ||
Odorant (Ethyl Butyrate) | Merck #E15701 | ||
Paraffin wax (liquid) light | SRL #18211 | ||
Roller clamps | Polymed #14098 | ||
Silicone tubes | OD = 0.6 cm, ID = 0.3 cm; roller clamps for flow control | ||
Vacuum pump | Hana #HN-648 (Any aquarium pump with flow direction reversed manually) | ||
Y-maze | Borosilicate glass | ||
Y-shaped glass tube (borosilicate glass) | Custom made, measurements in Figure 5A | ||
Common items: | |||
Any software for video playback (eg.- VLC media player) | https://www.videolan.org/vlc/ | ||
Computer for video data analysis | |||
Fly bottles | OD= 60 mm x Height= 140 mm; glass/polypropylene | ||
Fly vials | OD= 25 mm x Height= 85 mm; Borosilicate Glass | ||
Graph-pad Prism software | https://www.graphpad.com/scientific-software/prism/www.graphpad.com/scientific-software/prism/ | ||
ImageJ software | https://imagej.net/downloads | ||
Timer | |||
Video camera with video recording set up | Camcorder or a mobile phone camera will work | ||
For Fly Aspirator: | |||
Cotton | Absorbent, autoclaved | ||
Parafilm | Sigma-aldrich #P7793 | ||
Pipette tips | 200 µL or 1000 µL, choose depeding on outer diameter of the silicone tube | ||
Silicone/rubber tube | length= 30-50 cm. The tube should be odorless | ||
Composition of Fly food: | |||
Ingredients (amount for 1 L of food) | |||
Agar (8 g) | SRL # 19661 (CAS : 9002-18-0) | ||
Cornflour (80 g) | Organic, locally procured | ||
D-Glucose (20 g) | SRL # 51758 (CAS: 50-99-7) | ||
Propionic acid (4 g) | SRL # 43883 (CAS: 79-09-4) | ||
Sucrose (40 g) | SRL # 90701 (CAS: 57-50-1) | ||
Tego (Methyl para hydroxy benzoate) (1.25 g) | SRL # 60905 (CAS: 5026-62-0) | ||
Yeast Powder (10 g) | HIMEDIA # RM027 | ||
Fly lines used in the experiments in this study: | |||
Wild type (Canton S or CS) | BDSC # 64349 | ||
w1118 | BDSC # 3605 | ||
w[1118]; Fmr1[Δ50M]/TM6B, Tb[+] | BDSC # 6930 | ||
w[*]; Fmr1[Δ113M]/TM6B, Tb[1] | BDSC # 67403 | ||
MB247-GAL4 (Gaurav Das, NCCS Pune, India) | BDSC # 50742 | ||
LN1-GAL4 | NP1227, NP consortium, Japan | ||
row-shRNA | BDSC # 25971 |