Skip to main content
. 2019 Sep 23;374(1785):20190369. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0369

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

Drosophila larvae exhibit nocifensive rolling in response to menthol. (a) Menthol-evoked rolling. Top, cartoon. Bottom, video stills. (b) Cumulative proportion of wild-type rollers in response to menthol. The rolling response increased at higher menthol concentrations (% w/v). Cumulative proportion ± s.e.p. n = 30 for each condition. (c) Proportion of rollers in response to 8% menthol. Compared to wild-type, fewer TrpA1 and Trpm mutants rolled in response to menthol (TrpA1W903*, p = 0.0221; TrpA11, p = 0.0479; Trpm2, p = 0.0221; Trpm2/Trpm df, p = 0.0221). Trpm and TrpA1 are haplosufficient for menthol sensitivity, but fewer transheterozygous mutants rolled in response to menthol (p = 0.0090). Proportions represented as % rollers ± s.e.p. n = 30 for each condition. (d) Latency to roll in response to 8% menthol. painless mutation sensitized rollers (p = 0.0006), while TrpA1W903* mutation desensitized rollers (p = 0.0388). Latency represented as time to roll in seconds ± s.e.m. n proportional to % rollers, where initial sample size was 30. (Online version in colour.)