| Literature DB >> 25019586 |
Giorgio Fedele1, Edward W Green1, Ezio Rosato1, Charalambos P Kyriacou1.
Abstract
Many higher animals have evolved the ability to use the Earth's magnetic field, particularly for orientation. Drosophila melanogaster also respond to electromagnetic fields (EMFs), although the reported effects are quite modest. Here we report that negative geotaxis in flies, scored as climbing, is disrupted by a static EMF, and this is mediated by cryptochrome (CRY), the blue-light circadian photoreceptor. CRYs may sense EMFs via formation of radical pairs of electrons requiring photoactivation of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) bound near a triad of Trp residues, but mutation of the terminal Trp in the triad maintains EMF responsiveness in climbing. In contrast, deletion of the CRY C terminus disrupts EMF responses, indicating that it plays an important signalling role. CRY expression in a subset of clock neurons, or the photoreceptors, or the antennae, is sufficient to mediate negative geotaxis and EMF sensitivity. Climbing therefore provides a robust and reliable phenotype for studying EMF responses in Drosophila.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25019586 PMCID: PMC4104433 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Measuring negative geotaxis under a static EMF.
The delivery system for EMFs consists of a double-wrapped coil system (a, top view), and a custom-made swinger apparatus (b, side view) that allows tapping three vials simultaneously with equal force so the flies fall to the bottom of the tube. IR, infrared.
Figure 2Negative geotaxis is CRY dependent and is sensitive to EMFs.
Mean geotactic responses±s.e.m. based on three biological replicates. Orange bars, sham exposed; purple bars, EMF exposed. Asterisks denote results of Duncan’s a posteriori test within genotype after analysis of variance (ANOVA), *P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001. The results from Canton-S (CS) and cry were used as positive and negative controls for all analyses and b–d represent experiments performed only at 450 nm. (a) Response of CS and cry exposed to different wavelengths of light. (ANOVA, genotype F2,12=16.48, P=0.00036, exposure F1,12=8.67, P=0.012, G × E interaction F2,12=9.86, P=0.002). Post hoc tests revealed significant differences only between CS in blue light under sham compared with all the other conditions (P<0.001). (b) Responses of clock gal4/80>UAScry genotypes on a cry background (ANOVA, genotype F6,28=3.98, P=0.005, exposure F1,28=36.1, P=2 × 10−6, G × E interaction F6,28=3.08, P=0.019. Post hoc tests reveal no significant differences between sham timgal4/UAScry or crygal4/UAScry compared with CS, nor for EMF exposure. For sham, Pdfgal4>UAScry vs cry P=0.1, vs CS P=0.009 timgal4crygal80>UAScry vs cry P=0.007, vs CS P=0.12; for EMF Pdfgal4>UAScry vs cry P=0.06, vs CS P=0.22, timgal4crygal80>UAScry vs cry P=0.039, vs CS P=0.16. (c) Responses of eye and antennal genotypes (gal4>UAScry on cry background) (ANOVA, genotype F8,36=5.45, P=0.00016, exposure F1,36=99.4, P~0, G × E interaction F8,36=3.25, P=0.007. Post hoc for sham, CS was not significantly different from sham pain, rh5, rh6, R7gal4>UAScry, but JOgal4>UAScry vs cry P=0.18, vs CS P=0.0005. For EMF, none of the genotypes were significantly different from CS or cry). (d) Responses of cry variants driven by timgal4 (ANOVA, genotype F5,24=6.89, P=0.0004, exposure F=1,24=16.8, P=0.0005 and G × E interaction F5,24=4.13, P=0.008. Post hoc sham timgal4>cryΔ vs cry P=0.007, vs CS P=0.04, timgal4>cryW342F vs cry P=0.02, vs CS P=0.017; for EMF timgal4>cryΔ vs cry P=0.01, vs CS P=0.06, timgal4>cryW342F vs cry P=0.2, vs CS P=0.33).
Figure 3Control genotype responses to sham and EMFs.
(a) Sham controls are shown to illustrate which genotypes did not respond (red bars) or did respond (black bars) to EMFs. Mean climbing scores (±s.e.m.) under blue light based on three biological replicates. Repeated measure analysis of variance (ANOVA) (F(17,36)=4.41, P=0.001) and Duncan’s post hoc analysis (*P<0.05, **P<0.01), further reveal which genotypes differ significantly in their sham responses to CS wild type. Note that JO>cry; cry have intermediate levels of climbing under sham, yet show an EMF response (Fig. 2c), whereas genotypes with higher levels of sham climbing (Pdf>cry;cry, timgal4,crygal80>cry;cry, tim>cryΔ;cry) do not respond to EMF (Fig. 2b,d). (b) GAL4/UAS controls strains show normal EMF responses. Mean climbing scores (±s.e.m.) under blue light based on three biological replicates. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed a significant exposure (F(1,64)=217.52, P=0.0004) but no effect of genotype (F(15,64)=0.818, P=0.65) nor a G × E interaction (F(15,64)=0.60, P=0.86), so all genotypes responded in the same way to the EMF. All strains are in a w genetic background. Duncan’s post hoc *P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.