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First published online June 29, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2739-2748 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02297
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Behavioral responses of Drosophila to biogenic levels of carbon dioxide depend on life-stage, sex and olfactory context

Cécile Faucher1,2, Manfred Forstreuter3, Monika Hilker2 and Marien de Bruyne1,*

1 Freie Universität Berlin, Neurobiologie, Königin-Luise-Strasse 28-30, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
2 Freie Universität Berlin, Angewandte Zoologie, Haderslebener Strasse 9, D-12163 Berlin, Germany
3 Technische Universität Berlin, Ökologie, Königin-Luise-Strasse 22, D-14195 Berlin, Germany


Figure 1
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Fig. 1. Drosophila flies are attracted to apple cider vinegar but avoid CO2. Time spent by flies in each of the fields in a four-field olfactometer during a 600 s experiment. (A) Control situation when only air is delivered from the four corners (N=57). (B) Apple cider vinegar odor (N=39) is added to the air in one field (grey bar). (C) CO2 of different concentrations (N0.02%=38; N0.1%=42; N1%=35) is added to the air in one field (black bars). The orientation of the fields is indicated relative to the field laced with the test odor: L, left, O, opposite, R, right. Insets show examples of 10 min tracks of single flies for control, vinegar, and 1% CO2 respectively. The broken line at 150 s indicates an equal amount of time in all fields. Deviations from equal distribution were tested with a Friedman-ANOVA (P<0.001; ns, no significant difference). Fields with different letters above the bars are significantly different from each other (Wilcoxon-Wilcox test; P<0.05 for 0.1% CO2, P<0.001 for 1% CO2 and vinegar). Values are means ± s.e.m.

 

Figure 2
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Fig. 2. Apple cider vinegar makes females more sensitive to CO2. Distributions of time spent in four fields of the olfactometer as in Fig. 1. (A) 0.02% CO2 (black hatched bars) added to apple cider vinegar (vin.; grey bars; N=53, Friedman-ANOVA: P<0.001; Wilcoxon-Wilcox: P<0.001) is as attractive as apple cider vinegar alone (same data as in Fig. 1B; ns, no significant difference, Mann-Whitney U-test). (B) When all fields contain apple cider vinegar odor (grey bars) as background, a field laced with 0.02% CO2 (hatched bars) is avoided, but only by females (Nfemales=29, Nmales=17, Friedman-ANOVA, P<0.001; Wilcoxon-Wilcox: P<0.001). Values are means ± s.e.m.

 

Figure 3
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Fig. 3. Effects of vinegar and CO2 backgrounds on walking activity of male and female flies. Percentage of time walking is indicated for males and females when all four fields contain air only (Air), apple cider vinegar (Vin.) or 0.1% CO2. For females, Nair=30; Nvinegar=22; NCO2=21; for males, Nair=27; Nvinegar=20; NCO2=20. *Significant difference compared to air (Mann-Whitney U-test, P<0.01 for vinegar, P<0.05 for CO2); ns, no significant difference. Values are means ± s.e.m.

 

Figure 4
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Fig. 4. Bananas and flies emit carbon dioxide. (A) Mean CO2 emission for a single banana (N=5) over a period of 21 days. (B) Decrease in fresh mass of the bananas is linear over the same period. Values are means ± s.d. (C) CO2 emission from three groups of 20 flies. The horizontal bar indicates 1 min of shaking, which induces a sharp rise in CO2 emission. The three curves are normalized to their mean at a point before shaking. The dots indicate the absolute values for the three curves at that time. Note the differences in scale of both axes compared to A. The delay observed between the start of the stimulation and the increase in emission is caused by the design of the system.

 

Figure 5
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Fig. 5. Drosophila larvae avoid CO2 and prefer vinegar. (A) Mean distribution of groups of 10 larvae after 10 min when air is delivered in the four fields (N=18). (B) Mean distributions after 10 min when CO2 is added to one field (black) at two concentrations (N0.1%=24; N1%=25). (C) Mean distribution at four time points when one field (gray) is laced with vinegar odor (N=17). Abbreviations and statistics are as in Fig. 1. The broken line at 25% indicates an equal distribution in all fields. In contrast to the results in Figs 1 and 2 the test field is not significantly different from all control fields (Friedman-ANOVA, P<0.01 for CO2, P<0.001 for vinegar; Wilcoxon-Wilcox: P<0.05); ns, no significant difference. Values are means ± s.e.m.

 

Figure 6
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Fig. 6. The Gr21a-expressing neuron mediates CO2 detection in larvae. (A) Confocal image of the anterior of a third instar larva expressing membrane-bound UAS-mCD8::GFP (green) driven by a Gr21a-Gal4 construct. Dotted line indicates the position of the dome of the dorsal organ in the transmission image; arrows point to the terminal organs. (B,C) Distributions of larvae in the four-field olfactometer as in Fig. 5. (B) Responses to 1% CO2 by larvae lacking the Gr21a-expressing neurons due to Gr21a-driven expression of the apoptotic gene reaper (rpr) (Gr21a-rpr, N=22), compared to their genetic controls carrying only the driver construct (Gr21a, N=20) or the reaper construct (rpr, N=17). Significant avoidance is only seen in the controls. (C) Response to apple cider vinegar of larvae lacking the Gr21a-expressing neuron (Gr21a-rpr, N=18) is normal when compared to wild-type larvae (CS, same data as in Fig. 5C at 10:00 min; ns, no significant difference, Mann-Whitney U-test). Abbreviations and statistics are as in Fig. 1. The broken line at 25% indicates an equal distribution in all fields. In contrast to Figs 1 and 2 the test field is not significantly different from all control fields (Friedman-ANOVA, P<0.05 for CO2, P<0.001 for vinegar; Wilcoxon-Wilcox: P<0.05); ns, no significant difference. Values are means ± s.e.m.

 





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