Source: Gou, B., et al. High Throughput Assay to Examine Egg-Laying Preferences of Individual Drosophila melanogaster. J. Vis. Exp. (2016).
Drosophila females choose between substrates and select sites that are attractive for egg-laying. This video describes a behavioral assay that tests their decision-making, called the egg-laying preference assay. The featured clip demonstrates the procedure with a custom-built setup, which enables researchers not only to test the behavior of many females at the same time but is also compatible with video recording and optogenetic setups.
This protocol is an excerpt from Gou et al., High Throughput Assay to Examine Egg-Laying Preferences of Individual Drosophila melanogaster, J. Vis. Exp. (2016).
1. Chamber Construction, Assembly, Assay Setup
Figure 1: Egg-laying Chambers and Egg-laying Protocol. (A) Fully assembled egg -laying chamber. (B) Disassembled pieces. a: the loading piece (top), b: the divider piece (middle), c: the substrate (bottom) piece. Engineering drawings of these pieces are shown in Supplementary Figure 1-3. (C) The loading piece of the chamber. a': sliding doors, a": rails. The plastic sheets are inserted into the loading piece to serve as a floor to keep the loaded flies in place. We typically put color tapes onto the edge of the plastic sheets (red arrow). (D) The substrate (bottom) and the divider (middle) pieces of the chamber. Agarose is deposited into individual troughs to serve as egg-laying substrates (arrows). Quadrilateral outlines the egg-laying arena for a single fly. (E) Day 0 of collected females/males in a yeasted vial. (F) Day 4 – 5 of collected females/males in a yeasted vial. Note that larvae and adult females have eaten most of the yeast and the surface of the food has become occupied by larvae. The wet surface food crawling with larvae prevents females from laying more eggs in the vial. (G) Schematic depicting the protocol for setting up egg-laying behavior experiments. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Representative Egg-laying Results for Flies Choosing between Sucrose and Plain Substrates. (A) Side view of egg-laying results of wild type flies when they were given a choice between sucrose (150 mM) and plain substrates. White box outlines one egg-laying arena for a single fly. (B) Top view of egg-laying results. White box outlines one egg-laying arena for a single fly. (C) Preference index (PI) of wild type flies when asked to choose between a sucrose-containing substrate and a plain substrate. PI for each female is calculated as follows: (number of eggs on sucrose substrate – number of eggs on the plain substrates)/total number of eggs. Error bar indicates SEM. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Supplementary Figure 1: Engineering Drawings for the Divider and the Substrate Piece of the Chamber. (A-A") Different views of the substrate piece of the chamber. (B-B') Different views of the middle divider piece of the chamber. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Supplementary Figure 2: Engineering Drawings for the Loading Piece of the Chamber. (A-A') Different views of the upper layer of the loading piece of the chamber. (B-B') Different views of the bottom layer of the loading piece of the chamber. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Supplementary Figure 3: Engineering Drawing for the Sliding Door and the Rail on the Chamber. (A) The rail fixed onto the top piece of the chamber. (B) The sliding door for the chamber. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
UltraPure Agarose | Invitrogen | 16500-500 | |
Sucrose | Sigma | S0389 | |
Water bath | Fisher | 15-462-6Q | |
Egg-laying chambers | Custom Built | ||
Fly vials (narrow) | Genesee | 32-116BC |