AI Article Synopsis

  • Drosophila embryos develop a protective epidermal layer that helps maintain cellular balance and respond to injuries.
  • Puncture injuries using glass needles trigger a rapid response, recruiting immune cells (hemocytes) and activating transcriptional reporters for studying wound healing.
  • This model is advantageous for genetic testing and screening potential compounds for wound healing due to Drosophila's quick life cycle and ease of maintenance.

Article Abstract

The Drosophila embryo develops a robust epidermal layer that serves both to protect the internal cells from a harsh external environment as well as to maintain cellular homeostasis. Puncture injury with glass needles provides a direct method to trigger a rapid epidermal wound response that activates wound transcriptional reporters, which can be visualized by a localized reporter signal in living embryos or larvae. Puncture or laser injury also provides signals that promote the recruitment of hemocytes to the wound site. Surprisingly, severe (through and through) puncture injury in late stage embryos only rarely disrupts normal embryonic development, as greater than 90% of such wounded embryos survive to adulthood when embryos are injected in an oil medium that minimizes immediate leakage of hemolymph from puncture sites. The wound procedure does require micromanipulation of the Drosophila embryos, including manual alignment of the embryos on agar plates and transfer of the aligned embryos to microscope slides. The Drosophila epidermal wound response assay provides a quick system to test the genetic requirements of a variety of biological functions that promote wound healing, as well as a way to screen for potential chemical compounds that promote wound healing. The short life cycle and easy culturing routine make Drosophila a powerful model organism. Drosophila clean wound healing appears to coordinate the epidermal regenerative response, with the innate immune response, in ways that are still under investigation, which provides an excellent system to find conserved regulatory mechanisms common to Drosophila and mammalian epidermal wounding.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3969900PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50750DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

epidermal wound
12
wound response
12
wound healing
12
wound
9
embryos
8
drosophila embryos
8
puncture injury
8
promote wound
8
drosophila
7
epidermal
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!