Jadavji Laboratory

Nafisa M. Jadavji, PhD

Increased levels of folic acid reduce survival 24 hours after hypoxia in male and female Drosophila melanogaster


Journal article


Siddarth Gunnala, Alisha Harrison, Amber Juba, Paula Ashcraft, Teodoro Bottiglieri, Lori M. Buhlman, N. Jadavji
bioRxiv, 2025

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Gunnala, S., Harrison, A., Juba, A., Ashcraft, P., Bottiglieri, T., Buhlman, L. M., & Jadavji, N. (2025). Increased levels of folic acid reduce survival 24 hours after hypoxia in male and female Drosophila melanogaster. BioRxiv.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Gunnala, Siddarth, Alisha Harrison, Amber Juba, Paula Ashcraft, Teodoro Bottiglieri, Lori M. Buhlman, and N. Jadavji. “Increased Levels of Folic Acid Reduce Survival 24 Hours after Hypoxia in Male and Female Drosophila Melanogaster.” bioRxiv (2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Gunnala, Siddarth, et al. “Increased Levels of Folic Acid Reduce Survival 24 Hours after Hypoxia in Male and Female Drosophila Melanogaster.” BioRxiv, 2025.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{siddarth2025a,
  title = {Increased levels of folic acid reduce survival 24 hours after hypoxia in male and female Drosophila melanogaster},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {bioRxiv},
  author = {Gunnala, Siddarth and Harrison, Alisha and Juba, Amber and Ashcraft, Paula and Bottiglieri, Teodoro and Buhlman, Lori M. and Jadavji, N.}
}

Abstract

Hypoxia is a major component of ischemic stroke. The prevalence of ischemic stroke is expected to increase as the global population ages and risk factors, like obesity, are on the rise. Nutrition is a modifiable risk factor for ischemic stroke. Increased dietary intake of folic acid (FA) has become an increasing problem in the U.S and other countries as more people are consuming at or above the recommended daily amount of FA. The impact of too much dietary FA on hypoxia is not well understood. This study aimed to investigate how increased dietary levels of FA impact hypoxia outcomes using Drosophila melanogaster as a model. Adult female and male w1118 Drosophila melanogaster flies were placed on control (CD) and 100 µM folic acid (FAD) diets. When progeny was 5 to 6 days old, they were exposed to hypoxia for two hours prior to returning to normoxic conditions to model reperfusion. Using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, elevated FA levels were observed in FAD compared to CD flies. We observed escape behavior in hypoxia larvae, confirming exposure to hypoxia. We report increased acute hypoxia-induced mortality in FAD flies. Furthermore, FAD flies were not motivated to climb after hypoxia. There was no impact of FA on neurodegeneration in brain tissue. Data obtained suggests that hypoxia has a negative effect on survival and climbing behavior in the flies. Together these data suggest that increase dietary intake of FA can have negative health outcomes after hypoxia.