Authors
Zimmerman, D. M., Yin, R., Vaca, M., Samuel, A. D. T., de Bivort, B. L.
Abstract
The difficulty of cryopreservation has long been a limitation of Drosophila melanogaster as a genetic model organism. Here we report a statistically significant improvement in the efficiency of Drosophila cryopreservation by substituting limonene with the monoterpenoid fenchone in the embryo permeabilization step of a previously published method. We found that fenchone-permeabilized embryos exhibit greater uptake of cryoprotectant compared with those permeabilized by limonene, and a ~6-fold increase in the rate of egg-to-adult survival for wild-type flies. Using this improved protocol, we successfully cryopreserved and revived precious strains after 12 months of storage in liquid nitrogen. These results suggest that fenchone is a superior permeabilizing agent for fly embryo cryopreservation, expanding possibilities for the long-term maintenance of Drosophila and other insect species. Further refinement of this approach may enable cryopreservation to replace continuous culture as the method of choice for routine maintenance of fly stocks.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 09 Nov 2025.
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