Abstract

BackgroundCircadian clocks have been implicated in the regulation of pre-adult development of fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster. It is believed that faster clocks speed up development and slower clocks slow it down. We established three sets of D. melanogaster populations (early, control and late). The early and late populations were raised by selecting for flies that emerged either in the morning or in the evening under 12:12 hr light/dark (LD) cycles. After 75 generations of selection, the time course and waveform of the adult emergence and activity rhythms of the early and the late populations diverged from each other as well as from the controls. In this paper, we report the consequence of this selection on the rate of pre-adult development.ResultsWe assayed the pre-adult development time of the selected and control populations under 12:12 hr LD cycles and constant darkness (DD). Under LD cycles, the early populations develop faster than the controls, while the late populations develop slower than the controls. Although flies take longer to develop under DD than in LD, the relative differences between the mean development times of the selected and control populations remain unaltered in DD. In a separate experiment designed to investigate the effect of time of egg collection and experimental conditions on the duration of pre-adult stage, we assayed the development time of the selected and control populations by collecting eggs at different times of the day (morning and evening) and by assaying their pre-adult development time under constant light (LL), LD, and DD conditions. Irrespective of the time of egg collection and assay light regime, the late flies continue to develop slower than the early flies.ConclusionThe results of our study clearly indicate that selection on the timing of adult emergence alters the rate of pre-adult development in D. melanogaster. The timing of egg collection as well as assay light regime does not have any measurable effect on the relative differences between the developmental rates of the early and the late flies. Taken together these results appear to suggest that pleiotropic effects of clock genes mediate correlated changes in the timing of adult emergence and the rate of pre-adult development in D. melanogaster.

Highlights

  • Circadian clocks have been implicated in the regulation of pre-adult development of fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster

  • Experiment 1 We derived three sets of Drosophila populations by imposing selection for timing of adult emergence on four baseline populations which were maintained for several generations under 12:12 hr LD cycles

  • Post-hoc comparisons using 95% confidence interval (95%CI) around the mean revealed that the development time is significantly shorter under LD than DD, and the mean development time of the females is significantly shorter than the males (Tables 1, 2; Figures 2, 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Circadian clocks have been implicated in the regulation of pre-adult development of fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster. Circadian (circa = about; dies = day) clocks enable organisms to adapt to ambient environmental conditions by coupling behavioral and physiological events to cyclic factors in the environment [1,2] Timing of such events functions towards maximizing organism's potential to survive under fluctuating environmental conditions, suggesting a role of circadian clocks in the regulation of life history traits [3,4,5,6]. Circadian clocks have been implicated in the regulation of pre-adult development time and adult life span in a few insect species including fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster. In a study on the melon flies Bactrocera cucurbitae, where faster and slower developing lines were created through laboratory selection, it was shown that the τ of eclosion rhythm of the faster developing line was shorter (~22.6 hr) than that of the slower developing line (~30.9 hr) [810]

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