Protocol

Measurement of Taste Memory in Drosophila

  1. Alex C. Keene1,4
  1. 1Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843, USA
  2. 2Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
  3. 3Department of Biological Sciences, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York 13902, USA
  1. 4Correspondence: keenea{at}tamu.edu

Abstract

The ability to modify behavior as a result of previous experience allows an organism to adapt to changes in its environment. Even innate behaviors, like feeding initiation, can change if previously associated with a noxious stimulus. Here, we describe a taste memory assay pairing appetitive and bitter tastants, resulting in aversive taste conditioning. By training a fly to associate sweet sucrose applied to the tarsus with bitter quinine applied to the proboscis, flies quickly learn to suppress the reflexive proboscis extension to sucrose, providing a bioassay for behavioral and molecular plasticity. This single-fly taste memory assay may be applied to adult Drosophila of any genetic background and allows for interrogation of the neural circuitry and molecular processes encoding memories while simultaneously measuring behavior. Unlike many other memory assays, this system requires few custom components, and therefore can be easily established in laboratories with minimal expertise in the study of fly behavior.

Footnotes

  • From the Drosophila Neurobiology collection, edited by Bing Zhang, Ellie Heckscher, Alex C. Keene, and Scott Waddell.

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