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Bellymount enables longitudinal, intravital imaging of abdominal organs and the gut microbiota in adult Drosophila.

Leslie Ann Jaramillo KoyamaAndrés Aranda-DíazYu-Han SuShruthi BalachandraJudy Lisette MartinWilliam Basil LudingtonKerwyn Casey HuangLucy Erin O'Brien
Published in: PLoS biology (2020)
Cell- and tissue-level processes often occur across days or weeks, but few imaging methods can capture such long timescales. Here, we describe Bellymount, a simple, noninvasive method for longitudinal imaging of the Drosophila abdomen at subcellular resolution. Bellymounted animals remain live and intact, so the same individual can be imaged serially to yield vivid time series of multiday processes. This feature opens the door to longitudinal studies of Drosophila internal organs in their native context. Exploiting Bellymount's capabilities, we track intestinal stem cell lineages and gut microbial colonization in single animals, revealing spatiotemporal dynamics undetectable by previously available methods.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • stem cells
  • cross sectional
  • microbial community
  • cell therapy
  • mass spectrometry