FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
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Citation
Chaturvedi, A., Shankar, V., Simkhada, B., Lyman, R.A., Freymuth, P., Howansky, E., Collins, K.M., Mackay, T.F.C., Anholt, R.R.H. (2025). Arsenic toxicity in the Drosophila brain at single cell resolution.  Front Toxicol 7(): 1636431.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0262980
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Arsenic is an ubiquitous environmental toxicant with harmful physiological effects, including neurotoxicity. Modulation of arsenic-induced gene expression in the brain cannot be readily studied in human subjects. However, Drosophila allows quantification of transcriptional responses to neurotoxins at single cell resolution across the entire brain in a single analysis. We exposed Drosophila melanogaster to a chronic dose of NaAsO2 that does not cause rapid lethality and measured survival and negative geotaxis as a proxy of sensorimotor integration. Females survive longer than males but show earlier physiological impairment in climbing ability. Single-nuclei RNA sequencing showed widespread sex-antagonistic transcriptional responses with modulation of gene expression in females biased toward neuronal cell populations and in males toward glial cells. However, differentially expressed genes implicate similar biological pathways. Evolutionary conservation of fundamental processes of the nervous system enabled us to translate arsenic-induced changes in transcript abundances from the Drosophila model to orthologous human neurogenetic networks.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC12287011 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
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Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    Front Toxicol
    Title
    Frontiers in toxicology
    ISBN/ISSN
    2673-3080
    Data From Reference
    Chemicals (1)
    Genes (21)
    Human Disease Models (1)