Fruit flies and learning
This week I met with Jon Hayashi, a temp faculty member in
the Biosciences Department at PC who is a good resource for the type research
field that I am interesting in. We discussed about school, work and the kind of
research that I want to do. After discussion, I told him that I would like to
do something that has to do with genes in drosophila. So, he showed me a bunch
of experiments on drosophila to look at and have an idea of what I want to do. He
also gave me an article on Genetic approaches to learning in fruit flies and
some videos of experiments. After looking through all these experiments, I decided
to focus on fruit flies and learning.
In this area, Dr. Josh Dubnau of Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory did the T-Maze experiment to test the memories in fruit flies. After
the experiment, it turned out that flies can learn. They can form a short term
memory and also a long term memory if they are trained for a long period of
time. To conclude his experiment, Dr Josh Dubnau stated that, “We're beginning
to uncover the fact that many of the genes that are important for memory in
flies are probably also important for memory in distantly related animals, even
humans”.
For me, this experiment is amazing and I probably be
doing something similar for my internship to learn more about fruit flies and
their brain.
Here is the video of the experiment