Here we describe a method to inflict closed head traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Drosophila. This method provides a gateway to investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie TBI pathologies using the vast array of experimental tools and techniques available for flies.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions of people each year, causing impairment of physical, cognitive, and behavioral functions and death. Studies using Drosophila have contributed important breakthroughs in understanding neurological processes. Thus, with the goal of understanding the cellular and molecular basis of TBI pathologies in humans, we developed the High Impact Trauma (HIT) device to inflict closed head TBI in flies. Flies subjected to the HIT device display phenotypes consistent with human TBI such as temporary incapacitation and progressive neurodegeneration. The HIT device uses a spring-based mechanism to propel flies against the wall of a vial, causing mechanical damage to the fly brain. The device is inexpensive and easy to construct, its operation is simple and rapid, and it produces reproducible results. Consequently, the HIT device can be combined with existing experimental tools and techniques for flies to address fundamental questions about TBI that can lead to the development of diagnostics and treatments for TBI. In particular, the HIT device can be used to perform large-scale genetic screens to understand the genetic basis of TBI pathologies.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is defined as injury to the brain from an external mechanical force. Most commonly, TBI results from closed head forces such as blunt forces and inertial acceleration and deceleration forces that cause the brain to strike the inside of the skull. In the United States, it is estimated that 50,000 individuals die each year from TBI and 2.5-6.5 million individuals are living with the consequences of TBI, including debilitating physical, cognitive, and behavioral problems1,2. The consequences of TBI are not only due to primary mechanical injuries to the brain but also to secondary cellular and molecular injuries to the brain as well as other tissues that occur over time3-5. The development of approaches to diagnose and treat TBI has proven to be difficult because TBI is a complex disease process. The variable nature of primary injuries, human physiology, and environmental factors results in heterogeneous secondary injuries and pathologies. Underlying variable factors include the severity of the primary injury, the time between repetitive primary injuries, and the age and genotype of the individual. Understanding how each variable factor contributes to the consequences of TBI is likely to aid in the development of approaches to diagnose and treat TBI6,7.
Here we describe a method for inflicting closed head TBI in Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies) that can be used to delineate the contribution of variable factors to the consequences of TBI. The method is based on an initial observation that intensely hitting the side of a fly culture vial against the palm of a hand caused wild-type flies to become temporarily incapacitated, a likely consequence of TBI. Thus, we constructed the High-Impact Trauma (HIT) device to recapitulate the acceleration and deceleration forces from the hand-hitting action. A high-speed movie shows that a single strike from the HIT device causes flies to contact the vial wall several times with their head and body8. To some extent, all contacts are likely to cause the fly brain to ricochet and deform against the head capsule, similar to what happens to humans in falls and car crashes9. Accordingly, flies treated with the HIT device display phenotypes consistent with brain injury, including temporary incapacitation followed by ataxia, gradual recovery of mobility, gene expression changes in the head, and progressive neurodegeneration in the brain10. Thus, the HIT device makes it possible to study TBI using the enormous arsenal of experimental tools and techniques developed for flies.
1. Construction of the HIT Device
2. Operation of the HIT Device
We are interested in understanding why flies die shortly after primary injury. To quantify death, we determined the Mortality Index at 24 hr (MI24), which is the percentage of flies that died within 24 hr of the primary injury. Flies subjected to strikes from the HIT device were incubated at 25 °C in a vial with fly food, and the number of dead flies was counted after 24 hr. We used this approach to identify factors that affect the MI24 and found that the MI24 is not affected by the number of flies in a vial (10 to 60 flies was tested), the time between repetitive strikes (1 to 60 min was tested), or the sex of the fly10. In contrast, we found that age at the time of the primary injury and genotype did affect the MI24. Older flies had a higher MI24 than younger flies, and flies of different genotypes had significantly different MI24s.
In Figure 2, we tested whether the severity of the primary injury affects the MI24. To alter the severity of the primary injury, we deflected the spring to different angles. For each angle, vials of either 0-7 or 20-27 day old w1118 flies (a standard laboratory strain) were subjected to four strikes with 5 min between strikes. Three vials of 60 flies were examined for each angle. Flies were transferred to vials with molasses food, incubated at 25 °C, and the number of dead flies was counted after 24 hr. The average MI24 and standard error of the mean was calculated for each angle. These data reveal that larger angles of deflection, i.e., more severe primary injuries, result in a higher MI24 than smaller angles of deflection, i.e., less severe injuries. This was observed for both 0-7 and 20-27 day old flies. Furthermore, in accord with Katzenberger et al. 10, 20-27 day old flies had a significantly higher MI24 than 0-7 day old flies at angles ≥50°. Thus, these data indicate that at multiple ages the MI24 correlates with the severity of the primary injury.
Figure 1: Diagram of the HIT device. (A) Illustration of the top view of the HIT device in the resting position. (B) Illustration of the side view of the HIT device. The spring is shown in the resting position (dark red) and deflected to 90° (light red).
Figure 2: Primary injury severity correlates with the MI24. We determined the MI24 for 0-7 day old w1118 flies (light gray bars) and 20-27 day old w1118 flies (dark gray bars) that were subjected to four strikes from the HIT device with the spring deflected to the indicated angles in degrees. The 0 degree data are for flies not subjected to the HIT device. Shown are the average MI24 and the standard error of the mean. The MI24 of 0-7 and 20-27 day old flies was significantly different for 50° (P <0.05, one tailed t test) and angles > 50° (P <0.001, one tailed t test) but not for angles < 50°(P >0.1, one tailed t test).
The HIT device method is distinguished from other methods that inflict traumatic injury in flies by the fact that it causes closed head rather than penetrating TBI11. Furthermore, the HIT device method takes less time, effort, and skill to inflict TBI in many flies, so the method is more amenable than other methods to large-scale genetic screens. Lastly, the fact that primary injuries inflicted by the HIT device are not limited to the brain is both a limitation and an advantage. It is a limitation because additional studies are required to assess whether phenotypes are due to traumatic injury to the brain or to other body parts. On the other hand, polytrauma (traumatic injury to multiple body parts) often accompanies TBI and is thought to modulate TBI phenotypes, so the HIT device method can be used to investigate the contribution of polytrauma to TBI phenotypes. The fly TBI model also has advantages over rodent and non-human primate TBI models10. Large numbers of animals can be examined because flies breed rapidly (females lay ~100 eggs/day), have a short lifecycle (10 days from egg to mature adult at 25 °C), and are maintained in small vials and feed on inexpensive medium (~20¢/month/100 flies). In addition, TBI outcomes can easily be evaluated over the entire lifespan because adult flies have a relatively short lifespan (50-100 days at 25 °C). Lastly, an enormous arsenal of experimental tools and techniques developed from over 100 years of previous research on flies provides an unparalleled degree of experimental control for precise temporal and spatial regulation of gene expression; behavioral, developmental, and electrophysiological analyses; in vivo imaging etc.
This protocol describes the construction and operation of the HIT device, which is designed to inflict closed head TBI in flies. We have used the HIT device in conjunction with the MI24 assay to study organismal death following TBI7. However, the fly TBI model can be used in many other ways to understand death as well as other consequences of TBI. For example, physical consequences of TBI can be measured using assays for parameters such as climbing or flight, and behavioral consequences of TBI can be measured using assays for parameters such as sleep and learning and memory10,12-14. Structural effects on the brain can be determined using imaging techniques such as immunofluorescence microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Molecular effects on the brain can be determined using genomic assays such as RNA-seq or proteomic assays such as mass spectrometry. Genetic effects on the brain can be determined using approaches such as conditional gene knockdown and overexpression. Environmental effects on the consequences of TBI can be determined by varying pre- or post-injury parameters such as incubation temperature and diet or parameters of the HIT device such as the angle of spring deflection or the time between repetitive strikes. Finally, the HIT device can be used for large-scale genetic screens to address fundamental questions such as why the consequences of TBI are worse in older individuals than younger individuals as well as for large-scale drug screens that can be used to identify treatments for the consequences of TBI.
When used in a consistent manner, we have found that the HIT device produces reproducible phenotypes among independent experiments and users. Parameters that can affect reproducibility are the set-up and operation of the HIT device. Phenotypes can be significantly affected by small changes in the position of the ice bucket cover relative to the board, the position of the cotton ball in the fly vial, and the position of vial relative to the Velcro strip. Furthermore, as shown in Figure 2, phenotypes can be significantly affected by small changes in the angle of spring deflection. Thus, new users of the HIT device should be monitored to ensure that the set-up and operation are identical to that of other users. We routinely calibrate new users by having them determine the MI24 of 0-7 day old w1118 flies. Lastly, the HIT device does not need to be identical to the one described in the protocol. We expect that most parts of the HIT device can be altered while maintaining the ability to inflict TBI in flies.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant, R01 AG033620 (BG) and by Robert Draper Technology Innovation Funding (DAW).
Zinc plated compression spring | The Hillman Group | 540189 | 9 7/8 in (length), 15/16 in (outer diameter), 0.12 in (wire size) |
Wooden board | 9 in (length), 6.5 in (width), 0.75 in (height) | ||
Clamps | Sigma Electrical Manufacturing Corporation | 49822 | 3.10 in (length), 0.68 in (width), 1.11 in (height), EMT Two Hole Straps, click on type for 1 inch steel EMT conduit |
Loop half of self-adhesive velcro | 3 in (length), (3/4 in width) | ||
Polyurethane ice bucket cover | Fisher Scientific | 02-591-45 | 9 1/8 in (length), 9 1/8 in (width), 1 1/4 in (height) |
Plastic fly vials | Applied Scientific | AS-510 | 3 11/16 in (height), 1 1/16 in (inner diameter), 1 1/8 in (outer diameter) |
Large cotton balls | Fisher Scientific | 22-456-883 | |
Paper protractor | 10 in (diameter) |