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CBE Life Sci Educ 5(4): 353-360 2006
DOI: 10.1187/cbe.06-03-0152
© 2006 American Society for Cell Biology
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Articles

Enhancing Undergraduate Teaching and Research with a Drosophila Virginizing System

Dennis R. Venema

Faculty of Natural and Applied Sciences, Department of Biology, Trinity Western University, Langley, British Columbia V2Y 1Y1, Canada

Monitoring Editor: Karen Kalumuck

Address correspondence to: Dennis R. Venema (dennis.venema{at}twu.ca)

Laboratory exercises using Drosophila crosses are an effective pedagogical method to complement traditional lecture and textbook presentations of genetics. Undergraduate thesis research is another common setting for using Drosophila. A significant barrier to using Drosophila for undergraduate teaching or research is the time and skill required to accurately collect virgins for use in controlled crosses. Erroneously collecting males or nonvirgin females contaminates crosses with unintended genotypes and confounds the results. Collecting adequate numbers of virgins requires large amounts of time, even for those skilled in virgin collection. I have adapted an effective method for virgin collection that eliminates these concerns and is straightforward to use in undergraduate settings. Using a heat-shock–induced, conditional lethal transgene specifically in males, male larvae can be eliminated from a culture before adults eclose. Females thus eclose in the absence of males and remain virgin, eliminating the need to laboriously score and segregate freshly eclosed females. This method is reliable, easily adaptable to any desired phenotypic marker, and readily scaleable to provide sufficient virgins for large laboratory classes or undergraduate research projects. In addition, it allows instructors lacking Drosophila expertise to use this organism as a pedagogical tool.







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