Table

Table 1. Drosophila as a model organism

Size and diversity of tissue types
• Small and easy to culture in useful quantities in the lab.
• Prolific breeders, short life cycle (~10 days; 25°C).
• Contains the majority of complex tissue types found in mammals, but more accessible to manipulation.
• Good for imaging; small enough to examine whole organism under microscope and large enough to isolate individual tissues (e.g., embryos ~150 × 150 × 400 μm).
• Giant salivary glands with polytene chromosomes (easily identified bands) simple karyotype (four chromosomes).
Genetically tractable
• Many simple genetic screens over many years have identified, and continue to identify, new mutations.
• Sequenced genome (D. melanogaster and D. pseudoobscura).
• Many genetic tricks, such as P-element transformation, germ line clones, somatic clones, many tissue-specific expression lines, very easy RNAi on tissue culture cells.
• Various existing GFP-expressing lines available upon request from individual research groups or stock centers.
Background
• Large community of highly cooperative investigators and communal genome efforts easily accessible via Flybase Web site.
• Ready availability of mutant lines.
• History of the application of imaging techniques to fixed and live material.
Drawbacks
• Cannot store lines frozen very easily.
• Transgenic line development takes a few months.
• Homologous recombination still difficult.
• Does not “self” as with hermaphrodite nematodes.

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  1. doi:10.1101/pdb.tab194602 Cold Spring Harb Protoc 2006: pdb.tab194602-

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