A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye

A programmable optical stimulator for Drosophila eyes is presented. The target application of the stimulator is to induce retinal degeneration in fly photoreceptor cells by exposing them to light in a controlled manner. The goal of this work is to obtain a reproducible system for studying age-relate...

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Main Authors: Xinping Chen, Walter D. Leon-Salas, Taylor Zigon, Donald F. Ready, Vikki M. Weake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-10-01
Series:HardwareX
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721730024X
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spelling doaj-e6d5e4136a934899a31af4a4cbc58a362020-11-24T23:04:17ZengElsevierHardwareX2468-06722017-10-012C133310.1016/j.ohx.2017.07.001A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eyeXinping Chen0Walter D. Leon-Salas1Taylor Zigon2Donald F. Ready3Vikki M. Weake4Department of Biochemistry, Purdue University, 175 South University Street, West Lafayette, IN, USASchool of Engineering Technology, Purdue University, 401 North Grant Street, West Lafayette, IN, USASchool of Engineering Technology, Purdue University, 401 North Grant Street, West Lafayette, IN, USADepartment of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USADepartment of Biochemistry, Purdue University, 175 South University Street, West Lafayette, IN, USAA programmable optical stimulator for Drosophila eyes is presented. The target application of the stimulator is to induce retinal degeneration in fly photoreceptor cells by exposing them to light in a controlled manner. The goal of this work is to obtain a reproducible system for studying age-related changes in susceptibility to environmental ocular stress. The stimulator uses light emitting diodes and an embedded computer to control illuminance, color (blue or red) and duration in two independent chambers. Further, the stimulator is equipped with per-chamber light and temperature sensors and a fan to monitor light intensity and to control temperature. An ON/OFF temperature control implemented on the embedded computer keeps the temperature from reaching levels that will induce the heat shock stress response in the flies. A custom enclosure was fabricated to house the electronic components of the stimulator. The enclosure provides a light-impermeable environment that allows air flow and lets users easily load and unload fly vials. Characterization results show that the fabricated stimulator can produce light at illuminances ranging from 0 to 16000 lux and power density levels from 0 to 7.2 mW/cm2 for blue light. For red light the maximum illuminance is 8000 lux which corresponds to a power density of 3.54 mW/cm2. The fans and the ON/OFF temperature control are able to keep the temperature inside the chambers below 28.17 °C. Experiments with white-eye male flies were performed to assess the ability of the fabricated simulator to induce blue light-dependent retinal degeneration. Retinal degeneration is observed in flies exposed to 8 h of blue light at 7949 lux. Flies in a control experiment with no light exposure show no retinal degeneration. Flies exposed to red light for the similar duration and light intensity (8 h and 7994 lux) do not show retinal degeneration either. Hence, the fabricated stimulator can be used to create environmental ocular stress using blue light.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721730024XOptical stimulationLight-emitting diodesEmbedded computersDrosophilaRhodopsinOpen hardware
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xinping Chen
Walter D. Leon-Salas
Taylor Zigon
Donald F. Ready
Vikki M. Weake
spellingShingle Xinping Chen
Walter D. Leon-Salas
Taylor Zigon
Donald F. Ready
Vikki M. Weake
A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
HardwareX
Optical stimulation
Light-emitting diodes
Embedded computers
Drosophila
Rhodopsin
Open hardware
author_facet Xinping Chen
Walter D. Leon-Salas
Taylor Zigon
Donald F. Ready
Vikki M. Weake
author_sort Xinping Chen
title A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
title_short A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
title_full A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
title_fullStr A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
title_full_unstemmed A programmable optical stimulator for the Drosophila eye
title_sort programmable optical stimulator for the drosophila eye
publisher Elsevier
series HardwareX
issn 2468-0672
publishDate 2017-10-01
description A programmable optical stimulator for Drosophila eyes is presented. The target application of the stimulator is to induce retinal degeneration in fly photoreceptor cells by exposing them to light in a controlled manner. The goal of this work is to obtain a reproducible system for studying age-related changes in susceptibility to environmental ocular stress. The stimulator uses light emitting diodes and an embedded computer to control illuminance, color (blue or red) and duration in two independent chambers. Further, the stimulator is equipped with per-chamber light and temperature sensors and a fan to monitor light intensity and to control temperature. An ON/OFF temperature control implemented on the embedded computer keeps the temperature from reaching levels that will induce the heat shock stress response in the flies. A custom enclosure was fabricated to house the electronic components of the stimulator. The enclosure provides a light-impermeable environment that allows air flow and lets users easily load and unload fly vials. Characterization results show that the fabricated stimulator can produce light at illuminances ranging from 0 to 16000 lux and power density levels from 0 to 7.2 mW/cm2 for blue light. For red light the maximum illuminance is 8000 lux which corresponds to a power density of 3.54 mW/cm2. The fans and the ON/OFF temperature control are able to keep the temperature inside the chambers below 28.17 °C. Experiments with white-eye male flies were performed to assess the ability of the fabricated simulator to induce blue light-dependent retinal degeneration. Retinal degeneration is observed in flies exposed to 8 h of blue light at 7949 lux. Flies in a control experiment with no light exposure show no retinal degeneration. Flies exposed to red light for the similar duration and light intensity (8 h and 7994 lux) do not show retinal degeneration either. Hence, the fabricated stimulator can be used to create environmental ocular stress using blue light.
topic Optical stimulation
Light-emitting diodes
Embedded computers
Drosophila
Rhodopsin
Open hardware
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721730024X
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