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19.5: The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster

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    183199
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    The fruit fly has many of the features we look for in a model organism, it is easy and economical to maintain in the lab. Mating (fertilization is internal) produces many offspring, resulting in the laying of embryos that develop quickly, produce motile larvae that undergo metamorphosis to produce sexually mature adults in 10-12 days. Adults can be anesthetized and easily sorted under a dissecting microscope while virgin flies can be distinguished, making controlled crosses of phenotypically and genotypically characterized males and females possible for genetic analyses. A number of chromosomal rearrangements are available to control for recombination effects, and recombination does not occur in males. The characterization of genetic mutations influencing early, and highly stereotyped events in embryonic development, as well as the identification of what are known as homeotic mutations, in which one body part or region is transformed into another, set the stage for the application of molecular techniques that revealed the distribution of gene products, their binding partners, and in the case of transcription factors, the genes they regulate, and defined many of the basic mechanisms underlying embryonic development, such as, the establishment of molecular gradients, and the responses of cells to such gradients.


    This page titled 19.5: The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Michael W. Klymkowsky and Melanie M. Cooper.