Drosophila melanogaster: The story of the little pest and the famed prize:

ForumIAS announcing GS Foundation Program for UPSC CSE 2025-26 from 19 April. Click Here for more information.

ForumIAS Answer Writing Focus Group (AWFG) for Mains 2024 commencing from 24th June 2024. The Entrance Test for the program will be held on 28th April 2024 at 9 AM. To know more about the program visit: https://forumias.com/blog/awfg2024

Drosophila melanogaster: The story of the little pest and the famed prize:

Context:

  • Nobel Prize for medicine awarded for insights into internal biological clock.

Introduction:

  • The 108th Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine has been awarded to a trio of American scientists for their discoveries on the molecular mechanisms controlling circadian rhythms.
  • The prize shared between American scientists Jeffrey C Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W Young for work on the internal clock of living organisms

Area of discovery:

  • The team identified a gene within fruit flies that controls the creatures’ daily rhythm, known as the “period” gene. This gene encodes a protein within the cell during the night which then degrades during the day.
  • The team’s discoveries also helped to explain the mechanism by which light can synchronise the clock.
  • The work was important for the basic understanding of life.
  • The 2017 Prize underlines the continuing importance of Drosophila in the world of genetics and the Nobel.

Drosophila:

  • Drosophila melanogaster is a prolific breeder and has a short generation time, and that its genome has just four pairs of chromosomes.

Why do scientists investigate flies?

  • After the genome was sequenced in 2000, it was found that an astounding 60% of fruit fly genes are also present in humans in a similar form.
  • Germany’s Max Planck Society says that “around 75% of the genes which are known to cause illnesses in humans also occur in flies, and Drosophila possesses more than 90% of the genes that can trigger cancer in humans.
  •  Scientists worked to create disease-free organisms (eugenics).
  • It was discovered that it was easy to modify the fruit fly genome to understand how genotype alters phenotype.

Significance of research in this field:

  • Research on the body clock has helped scientists improve health. Many drugs now on the market work best when taken at the right time. The cholesterol-cutting drug Mevacor, for example, is taken at night because levels of the enzyme it targets are highest then. The same is true for low-dose aspirin used to reduce blood pressure.

Previous prize winners:

  •  Herman Muller, won the 1946 Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering that the fruit fly gene could be altered by radiation.
  • George W Beadle who, along with Edward L Tatum won one half of the 1958 Prize for their discovery that genes act by regulating definite chemical events.
  • In 1995, three development biologists, Edward B Lewis, Christiane Nusslein-Volhard and Eric F Wieschaus, won the Prize for discovering the role of key genes in the development of the fruit fly embryo that also plays a crucial role in human embryonic development.
  • Last year the prize was won by  Yoshinori Ohsumi, a Japanese cell biologist who unpicked the mechanisms by which the body break downs and recycles components of cells – a process that guards against various diseases, including cancer and diabetes.
Print Friendly and PDF
Blog
Academy
Community