High-resolution analysis of individual Drosophila melanogaster larvae uncovers individual variability in locomotion and its neurogenetic modulation

Author:

Thane Michael12,Paisios Emmanouil1,Stöter Torsten3,Krüger Anna-Rosa14,Gläß Sebastian1,Dahse Anne-Kristin5,Scholz Nicole5ORCID,Gerber Bertram167ORCID,Lehmann Dirk J.28,Schleyer Michael1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department Genetics of Learning and Memory, Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Magdeburg, Germany

2. Department of Simulation and Graphics, Otto von Guerike University, Magdeburg, Germany

3. Combinatorial NeuroImaging Core Facility, Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Magdeburg, Germany

4. Institute of Biology, Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany

5. Division of General Biochemistry, Rudolf Schönheimer Institute of Biochemistry, Medical Faculty, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany

6. Institute of Biology, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany

7. Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, Magdeburg, Germany

8. Department for Information Engineering, Faculty of Computer Science, Ostfalia University of Applied Science, Brunswick-Wolfenbuettel, Germany

Abstract

Neuronally orchestrated muscular movement and locomotion are defining faculties of multicellular animals. Due to its simple brain and genetic accessibility, the larva of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster allows one to study these processes at tractable levels of complexity. However, although the faculty of locomotion clearly pertains to the individual, most studies of locomotion in larvae use measurements aggregated across animals, or animals tested one by one, an extravagance for larger-scale analyses. This prevents grasping the inter- and intra-individual variability in locomotion and its neurogenetic determinants. Here, we present the IMBA (individual maggot behaviour analyser) for analysing the behaviour of individual larvae within groups, reliably resolving individual identity across collisions. We use the IMBA to systematically describe the inter- and intra-individual variability in locomotion of wild-type animals, and how the variability is reduced by associative learning. We then report a novel locomotion phenotype of an adhesion GPCR mutant. We further investigated the modulation of locomotion across repeated activations of dopamine neurons in individual animals, and the transient backward locomotion induced by brief optogenetic activation of the brain-descending ‘mooncrawler’ neurons. In summary, the IMBA is an easy-to-use toolbox allowing an unprecedentedly rich view of the behaviour and its variability of individual larvae, with utility in multiple biomedical research contexts.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development

European Commission

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology,General Neuroscience

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