PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Dhananjay Chaturvedi AU - Sunil Prabhakar AU - Aman Aggarwal AU - K VijayRaghavan TI - Adult Drosophila Muscle Morphometry through MicroCT reveals dynamics during aging AID - 10.1101/587733 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 587733 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/25/587733.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/25/587733.full AB - Indirect Flight Muscles (IFMs) in adult Drosophila have served as a valuable model for studying muscle development. In terms of function, they provide the key power stroke in adult insect flight. Variability in their architecture including of fiber numbers, shape and arrangement may provide insightful clues into adult muscle function. Conventional histological preparations in imaging techniques severely limit exact morphometric analysis of flight muscles, thereby impeding causal or correlative studies between muscle morphology and function. In this study we employ MicroCT scanning on a tissue preparation that retains muscle morphology under homeostatic conditions. We use this method to deliver precise measurements of a subset of IFMs, the Direct Longitudinal Muscles’ (DLMs) size and shape, in male and female Drosophila and changes therein, with age. Our findings reveal several unexpected characteristics of muscle fibers. We also demonstrate application to other insect species making it a valuable tool for histological analysis of insect biodiversity.Significance Statement Adult Drosophila muscles serve as models of homeostatic muscles. Accurate analysis of their form and function is key to understanding affects of genetic and physiological states on them. Recording adult muscle shape and volume has so far depended on protocols that inevitably distort tissue. Here, we use a MicroCT scanning based method that delivers changes in shape, size and organization between males and females, with time. This method is a significant step forward in recording muscle structure in situ with applications across species.