10.6084/m9.figshare.1162437.v1 Christine Damrau Christine Damrau Björn Brembs Björn Brembs Julien Colomb Julien Colomb Drosophila sugar response is increased by starvation duration and sucrose concentration in a locomotion-independent proboscis extension test. figshare 2014 Drosophila proboscis-extension starvation method sucrose preference test Neuroscience Genetics Behavioral Neuroscience 2014-09-05 08:20:44 Dataset https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Drosophila_sugar_response_is_increased_by_starvation_duration_and_sucrose_concentration_in_a_locomotion_independent_proboscis_extension_test_/1162437 <p><strong>A. Proboscis extension response assay.</strong> One to two days old CantonS flies of mixed gender were starved for the indicated time with ad libitum access to water. Four hours before testing, they were glued to a copper hook between head and thorax. For the test, the hook was fixed to clamp which was attached to a rack. In this locomotion-independent assay, all tarsi can be stimulated with no stress or pressure on abdomen by a serial dilution of seven increasing sucrose concentrations (0%, 0.1%, 0.3%, 0.6%, 1%, 3%, 10%, 30%, 30% to labellum).</p> <p><strong>B. The proportion of flies</strong> that extended proboscis after being stimulated at all the tarsi. Flies either responding to the first (water) or not responding to the last 30% to the labellum were excluded from the data analysis. The proportion of responding flies increases not only with increasing sucrose concentration but also with increasing starvation time of 21 hours compared to 14 hours.</p> <p><strong>C. The response index</strong> is significantly higher after 21 hours compared to 14 hours of starvation indicated by asterisk (Wilcoxon rank sum test, p < 0.05) and was calculated by summing the positive proboscis extension responses to all the seven stimulations and are illustrated as medians (bar), the 75%- and 25%-quartiles (box) and the total data range (whiskers). Numbers inside the boxes indicate sample sizes.</p>