Inside Science
/
Article

Scientists Make See-Through Fruit Flies

NOV 28, 2018
Cells in the fly specimens’ nervous systems can be seen glowing through the insects’ transparent bodies.
Scientists Make See-Through Fruit Flies lead image

The optical and nervous system of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster.

TU Wien

(Inside Science) -- While fruit flies may bother people who have week-old bananas at home, the humble insects have for decades benefited scientists studying how organisms live and grow. The tiny flies are more like humans than you might initially think -- about 60 percent of fly genes match with a similar human gene -- and they breed quickly in the lab. Beginning in 1933, the Nobel committee has so far awarded six prizes in physiology or medicine for fly research, including the 2017 Prize for uncovering how the body’s internal clock works .

Now a team of scientists in Austria has given fruit fly researchers a handy new tool to prepare their specimens for study: a recipe for making a see-through fly. Dubbed FlyClear, it includes step-by-step instructions for how to soak fruit fly larvae, pupae or adults in a series of chemicals that turn the flies transparent. The fruit flies’ eyes -- typically a bright red -- were especially tricky to clear.

A see-through fly is useful because the insects can be genetically modified so that parts of their insides glow, and this glowing can be imaged with a microscope (without having to chop the fly up into bits) if the light can just travel through the fly. One key advantage of FlyClear is that it works without destroying the molecules that make the fly glow.

The team demonstrated the approach by creating high-resolution 3D images of the nervous systems of fruit flies at various stages of development. The images could help scientists study the way neurons connect and how those connections govern behavior or change in cases of neurodegenerative disease.

The work was published this month in the journal Nature Communications.

More Science News
FYI
/
Article
AIP
/
Article
/
Article
Using principles of superposition and entanglement, researchers develop a framework to tailor a patient’s cancer treatment to their entire molecular background.
/
Article
Stackable cartridge-like device foregoes complex pumps and tubing by providing fluid flow with a hydrogel-based flow resistor that generates passive pressure gradients.
/
Article
There are tens to hundreds of billions of photons in a single firefly flash, a number that has historically been overestimated.
/
Article
The protein’s electrostatic field is the most important factor in the intensity of its light emission.
/
Article
/
Article
Nuclear winter, climate change, bioterrorism, AI. Those and other threats are growing in potential impact. What can we do?
/
Article
The specialized devices are democratizing access to cosmic-ray experiments.
/
Article
Europe’s particle physicists choose a 91 km electron–positron collider as the next global flagship project.
/
Article
The seasoned high school physics teacher challenges students to engage in an increasingly distracted world.