The minuteness of Drosophila poses a challenge to quantify performance of its tubular heart and computer-Aided analysis of its beating heart has evolved as a resilient compromise between instrumental costs and data robustness. Here, we introduce an optical flow algorithm (OFA) that continuously registers coherent movement within videos of the beating Drosophila heart and uses this information to subscribe the time course of observation with characteristic phases of cardiac contraction or relaxation. We report that the OFA combines high discriminatory power with robustness to characterize the performance of the Drosophila tubular heart using indicators from human cardiology. We provide proof of this concept using the test bed of established cardiac conditions that include the effects of ageing, knockdown of the slow repolarizing potassium channel subunit KCNQ and ras-mediated hypertrophy of the heart tube. Together, this establishes the analysis of coherent movement as a suitable indicator of qualitative changes of the heart's beating characteristics, which improves the usefulness of Drosophila as a model of cardiac diseases.
CITATION STYLE
Monck, H., Toppe, D., Michael, E., Sigrist, S., Richter, V., Hilpert, D., … Schwärzel, M. (2017). A new method to characterize function of the Drosophila heart by means of optical flow. Journal of Experimental Biology, 220(24), 4644–4653. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.164343
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