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    "path": "/journals/biology/micropub-biology-002132",
    "result": {"data":{"article":{"manuscript":{"id":"a018cc73-5828-4003-8502-f5a2544a835b","submissionTypes":["negative result"],"citations":[],"doi":"10.17912/micropub.biology.002132","dbReferenceId":null,"pmcId":null,"pmId":null,"proteopedia":null,"reviewPanel":null,"species":["drosophila"],"integrations":[],"corrections":null,"history":{"received":"2026-04-08T22:45:10.537Z","revisionReceived":"2026-05-13T21:20:30.643Z","accepted":"2026-05-18T13:15:48.403Z","published":"2026-05-18T20:14:11.058Z","indexed":"2026-06-01T20:14:11.058Z"},"versions":[{"id":"146fb9a3-513f-4eb7-a9b9-0fb91c792f34","decision":"revise","abstract":"<p>Congenital heart defects affect females and males differently. Several congenital heart defects arise during the formation of the heart tube, suggesting that heart tube morphogenesis may differ between females and males. We investigated if the fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>displays sexual dimorphisms in the cellular mechanisms of heart tube formation. Quantitative microscopy revealed no differences between females and males in the migration of cardiac progenitors to form the heart tube. Our results suggest that <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms in early cardiac development, and support the omission of sex as an experimental variable when investigating <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube morphogenesis.</p>","acknowledgements":"<p>We are grateful to Ana Maria do Carmo, Alexandra Korolov, Willow Peterson and Ji Hong Sayo for critical reading of this manuscript. RPV was partially supported by the Undergraduate Summer Research Program of the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program.</p>","authors":[{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research","Division of Engineering Science"],"credit":["formalAnalysis","dataCuration","fundingAcquisition","investigation","methodology","software","validation","visualization","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"rafa.perez@mail.utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rafael","lastName":"Perez-Vicente","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research"],"credit":["investigation","methodology","software","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"negar.balaghi@MAIL.UTORONTO.CA","firstName":"Negar","lastName":"Balaghi","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research, Translational Biology and Engineering Program","Department of Cell and Systems Biology","Developmental and Stem Cell Biology Program"],"credit":["conceptualization","fundingAcquisition","methodology","project","resources","software","supervision","validation","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing","investigation"],"email":"rodrigo.fernandez.gonzalez@utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rodrigo","lastName":"Fernandez-Gonzalez","submittingAuthor":true,"correspondingAuthor":true,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":"0000-0003-0770-744X"}],"awards":[],"conflictsOfInterest":"<p>The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest present.</p>","dataTable":{"url":null},"extendedData":[{"description":"<p>Video S1. Tissue dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Heart tube closure in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe-GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS1.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/54de77f810dd499f012aaa738a2c5ead.mp4"},{"description":"<p>Video S2. Cardioblast dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Cardioblast migration in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker MidE19:GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS2.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/5606e9f5729aa9005bc4c4174b4ff47b.mp4"}],"funding":"<p>This work was funded by grants to RFG from the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-2025-04527), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (30279 and 43988) and Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program. RFG is the Tier II Canada Research Chair in Quantitative Cell Biology and Morphogenesis.</p>","image":{"url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/618dc3b355396d62a8dec9c80236938f.png"},"imageCaption":"<p><b>(A, G) </b>Heart tube closure (A) and cardioblast migration (G) in female (A, G, orange in A'', G'') or male (A', G', blue in A'', G'') embryos expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe-GFP (A), or the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (G). The dominant orange hue outside the heart in (A'') indicates sxl-Pe-GFP expression. Shading in (A-A') indicates the luminal area. Dashed rectangles show the regions used to generate the kymographs in (B, H). <b>(B, H)</b> Kymographs of the dashed regions in (A) and (G), respectively. <b>(C-F)</b> Luminal area (C), heart tube closure rate constant (D), luminal circularity (E), and maximum anterior-posterior and medial-lateral luminal lengths (F) for females (orange, <i>n</i> = 7 embryos) or males (blue, <i>n</i> = 8). <b>(I-L)</b> Distance between contralateral pairs of cardioblasts (I), cardioblast speed (J), period of oscillation (K), and net medial step (L) in females (orange, 152 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos), or males (blue, 184 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos). (A, B, G, H) Anterior, left; medial, centre. Bars, 20 μm (A, G) or 5 min (B, H). (C, E-F, I) Error bars show the standard error of the mean. (D, J-K) Line indicates the mean, boxes show the standard error of the mean, bars indicate the standard deviation.</p>","imageTitle":"<p>The tissue and cell dynamics of <i>Drosophila</i> heart tube formation show no sexual dimorphism</p>","methods":"<p><b>Fly stocks</b></p><p>We used Flybase (release FB2025_03) to find information on stocks and gene expression (Öztürk-Çolak et al., 2024). <i>D. melanogaster </i>strains (see Resources and Reagents) were kept at room temperature on fly food provided by a central kitchen operated by H. Lipshitz. Embryos were collected overnight on apple juice agar plates in plastic cages at room temperature (~23°C). Stage 14-15 embryos (collected 12-14 hours after egg laying) were used.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>We used <i>mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP </i>(Jin et al., 2013) to image cardioblast nuclei and <i>hand-GFP:moesinABD </i>(Haack et al., 2014)<i> </i>to visualize F-actin in the heart. <i>sxl-Pe-GFP </i>(Thomson et al., 2004)<i> </i>(Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center #32565) was used to identify female embryos based on the expression of cytoplasmic GFP driven by the female-specific <i>sxl-pe </i>promoter.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Timelapse imaging</b></p><p>Embryos were dechorionated in 50% bleach in water for 2 minutes, rinsed and glued dorsal side down on a glass coverslip using heptane (Caledon Laboratory Chemicals) glue. Embryos were covered in a 1:1 mix of halocarbon oil 27 and 700 (Sigma-Aldrich) for live imaging (Scepanovic et al., 2021). We imaged embryos on a Revolution XD spinning disk confocal microscope (Andor) equipped with an iXon Ultra 897 camera, a 10x air lens (NA 0.40, Olympus) and a 60x oil-immersion lens (NA 1.35, Olympus). We acquired sixteen-bit Z-stacks every 15 seconds at 0<b>.</b>5<b> </b>or 0<b>.</b>75 µm<b> </b>steps (21 to 37 slices per stack) using Metamorph Software (Molecular Devices). Maximum intensity projections of the stacks were generated with Fiji (Schindelin et al., 2012) and used for analysis.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Sex classification</b></p><p>Embryonic sex was determined either by using sxl-Pe-GFP expression to identify female embryos prior to imaging, or by allowing embryos to develop after imaging and using gonad morphology in the larva and both gonad and body morphology in the adult to assign a sex to the corresponding movie (Hartenstein, 1993). Individual embryos were transferred to yeasted apple agar plates after imaging and allowed to develop at room temperature until third instar larva (5-6 days) or adult (12-14 days) stages.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Image quantification</b></p><p>Automated object segmentation, editing and analysis were performed using our open-source image analysis platform, PyJAMAS (Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022). For object segmentation, the LiveWire algorithm (Fernandez-Gonzalez &amp; Zallen, 2013) was used to semi-automatically annotate heart lumens and cardioblast nuclei. We used semi-automated annotations to train a ReSCU-Net and a U-Net for luminal and nuclear segmentation, respectively (Falk et al., 2019; Hawkins et al., 2025). The heart tube closure rate constant, <i>k</i>, was defined by fitting the luminal area over time with a decaying exponential:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) = <i>A</i>e<sup>-</sup><i><sup>kt</sup></i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (1),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>a</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>is the luminal area at time <i>t</i>, and <i>A</i> is the maximum luminal area. We quantified the maximum AP and ML luminal lengths by rotating the luminal annotations such that the longest axis was perpendicular to the horizontal axis, and measuring the difference between the maximum and minimum x-coordinates (ML length) or y-coordinates (AP length). Luminal circularity at time <i>t</i>, <i>c</i>(<i>t</i>), was calculated as:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>c</i>(<i>t</i>) = 4π<i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) / <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<sup>2</sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>represents the luminal perimeter at time <i>t</i>. Cardioblast positions were determined using the centroid of the cardioblast nucleus (Balaghi et al., 2023). The speed of cardioblast migration was the slope of a line fitted to the distance travelled by individual nuclei over time. The period of oscillation was measured as the time lag of the first peak of the autocorrelation of each cardioblast velocity curve.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Statistical analysis</b></p><p>Embryonic means were compared using non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests. For time series, error bars indicate the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.). In box plots, error bars show the s.d., boxes indicate the s.e.m., and a line inside the box denotes the mean.</p>","reagents":"<table><tbody><tr><td><p><b>Reagent or resource</b></p></td><td><p><b>Source</b></p></td><td><p><b>Identifier</b></p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Experimental models: organisms/strains</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Jin et al., 2013)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: hand- GFP:moesinABD</i></p></td><td><p>(Haack et al., 2014)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster:</i></p><p><i>sxl-Pe-GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Thomson et al., 2004), Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center</p></td><td><p>32565</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Chemicals</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Heptane</p></td><td><p>Caledon Laboratory Chemicals</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 5400-1-10</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 27</p></td><td><p>Sigma Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 118773</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 100</p></td><td><p>Sigma Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 118898</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Software</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>PyJAMAS</p></td><td><p>(Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022)</p></td><td><p>pyjamas.readthedocs.io</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Fiji</p></td><td><p>(Schindelin et al., 2012)</p></td><td><p>imagej.net</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>MetaMorph</p></td><td><p>Molecular Devices</p></td><td><p>RRID:SCR,_002368</p></td></tr></tbody></table>","patternDescription":"<p>Congenital heart defects (CHDs) remain the leading birth defect (Zimmerman et al., 2020; Dotson et al., 2024). Anomalies in the early stages of heart development are associated with embryonic lethality and several CHDs (Gittenberger-de Groot et al., 2005; Bruneau, 2008; Ivanovitch et al., 2017). This includes outflow tract malformations, which account for 30% of CHDs (Sinha et al., 2015). A clear sexual dimorphism exists on the incidence of CHDs and outflow tract defects in particular (Mercuro et al., 2014; Deegan et al., 2021; Pugnaloni et al., 2023). Abnormal heart tube development is often a consequence of the defective migration of cardiac progenitors (Kelly et al., 2001; Sinha et al., 2015). Whether differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation underlie the sexual dimorphisms in CHD has not been investigated.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>is an excellent system to investigate the dynamics of cardiac morphogenesis. In both vertebrates and invertebrates heart development begins with the formation of a tube (Bodmer, 1995; Moorman &amp; Christoffels, 2003; Souidi &amp; Jagla, 2021). The heart tube forms as two groups of cardiac progenitors move toward each other from opposite sides of the embryo. In <i>Drosophila</i>, two contralateral rows of 52 cardiac progenitors (cardioblasts) each, migrate toward the dorsal midline, where they meet and form a tube (McFaul &amp; Fernandez-Gonzalez, 2017). We showed that cardioblasts do not move monotonically forward (Balaghi et al., 2023). Instead, cardioblasts take cyclic forward and backward steps associated with waves of the molecular motor non-muscle myosin II and periodic cell shape changes. Periodic cardioblast steps are rectified into directional movement by a supracellular cable formed by the cytoskeletal protein filamentous actin (F-actin) at the trailing edge of cardioblasts. Potential differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos have not been investigated.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>To establish if there are differences in tissue dynamics between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos during heart tube formation, we imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing the cardiac-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD (Haack et al., 2014), and sxl-Pe:GFP (Thomson et al., 2004), which displays female-specific cytoplasmic GFP expression (Fig. 1A-A'', 0 min). Visual inspection did not reveal any significant differences in dynamics of heart tube formation between females and males (Fig. 1A'', B and Video S1). We used a recurrent neural network architecture, ReSCU-Net (Hawkins et al., 2025), to automatically trace the outline of the heart. We quantified luminal area changes over time (Fig. 1C) and fitted an exponential decay to the luminal area measurements to extract a heart tube closure rate constant (Fig. 1D). We found that the heart tube closed with a rate constant of 1.4±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> (mean±standard deviation, s.d.) in female embryos, similar to the closure rate constant of 1.2±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> in male embryos (Fig. 1D). To further determine if there were differences in the morphology of the heart tube as it formed, we quantified the circularity and maximum length of the luminal area along the anterior-posterior and medial-lateral axes of the embryo (Fig. 1E-F). Consistent with our measurements of heart tube closure dynamics, we found no differences in heart tube morphology between female and male embryos. Thus, our results suggest no sexual dimorphism exists in the tissue dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube closure.</p><p><b>&nbsp;</b></p><p>To further determine if there are differences in the cellular behaviours associated with heart tube formation in <i>Drosophila,</i> we measured cardioblast migration dynamics during heart tube development (Fig. 1G-H and Video S2). We imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing a cardioblast-specific nuclear marker, Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (Jin et al., 2013). We previously showed that nuclear dynamics match cellular dynamics in <i>Drosophila </i>cardioblasts (Balaghi et al., 2023). After imaging, embryos were allowed to develop into larvae and adults, and were sexed based on gonad or body morphology (Hartenstein, 1993). We automatically outlined cell nuclei from confocal microscopy movies using a U-Net, a convolutional neural network architecture (Falk et al., 2019; Balaghi et al., 2023). We found that cardioblasts migrated towards the dorsal midline at a similar speed in both females and males (23.0±6.7 μm/hr <i>vs. </i>22.4±3.3 μm/hr, respectively, Fig. 1I-J). To further establish if the mechanisms of cell movement varied between females and males, we quantified the oscillatory dynamics of cardioblast nuclei. Our results showed that the period of cardioblast oscillation was not significantly different between females and males (1.7±0.8 min <i>vs. </i>1.4±0.8 min, respectively, Fig. 1K). We could not detect any differences in the amplitude of the medial (1.9±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>2.0±0.2 μm for males) or lateral (0.8±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>0.7±0.1 μm for males) steps, with comparable net medial steps of 1.2±0.2 μm in females and<i> </i>1.3±0.2 μm in males (Fig. 1L). Thus, our results indicate that there are no sexual dimorphisms in the dynamics of cardioblast migration during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Altogether, our results suggest that the early stages of heart development in <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms, at least not at the level of cellular or tissue dynamics. The oscillatory movement of cardioblasts and the coordination of cardioblast migration is driven by periodic myosin waves and a supracellular F-actin cable (Balaghi et al., 2023). Thus, our results suggest that the cytoskeletal structures associated with heart tube formation will be similar between females and males. This is consistent with evidence from other systems in which actomyosin-based cytoskeletal networks drive collective cell movement. For example, the wound healing response in monolayer epithelia of both female and male origin is associated with a supracellular actomyosin cable that guides and coordinates cell movements (Bement et al., 1993; Marpeaux et al., 2026). Our data support the omission of sex as a biological variable in studies of cellular dynamics during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation. However, a limitation of our assay is that we did not quantify cell or tissue dynamics in naturally-occurring abnormal hearts (e.g. missing cardioblasts). Further studies measuring the relative incidence of defective heart tubes in females and males, at embryonic, larval, and adult stages, will reveal the extent to which <i>Drosophila </i>can be used to model sexual dimorphisms in CHDs.</p>","references":[{"reference":"<p>Balaghi N, Erdemci-Tandogan G, McFaul C, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2023. Myosin waves and a mechanical asymmetry guide the oscillatory migration of Drosophila cardiac progenitors. Dev Cell 58(14): 1299-1313.e5.</p>","pubmedId":"37295436","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Bement WM, Forscher P, Mooseker MS. 1993. A novel cytoskeletal structure involved in purse string wound closure and cell polarity maintenance.. The Journal of cell biology 121: 565-578.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.121.3.565"},{"reference":"<p>Bodmer R. 1995. Heart development in Drosophila and its relationship to vertebrates. Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine 5: 21-28.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/1050-1738(94)00032-Q"},{"reference":"<p>Bruneau BG. 2008. The developmental genetics of congenital heart disease. Nature 451: 943-948.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nature06801"},{"reference":"<p>Deegan DF, Nigam P, Engel N. 2021. Sexual Dimorphism of the Heart: Genetics, Epigenetics, and Development. Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 8: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252"},{"reference":"<p>Dotson A, Covas T, Halstater B, Ragsdale J. 2024. Congenital Heart Disease. Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice 51: 125-142.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.pop.2023.07.007"},{"reference":"<p>Falk T, Mai D, Bensch R, Çiçek zn, Abdulkadir A, Marrakchi Y, et al., Ronneberger. 2018. U-Net: deep learning for cell counting, detection, and morphometry. Nature Methods 16: 67-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/s41592-018-0261-2"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Balaghi N, Wang K, Hawkins R, Rothenberg K, McFaul C, et al., Castle. 2021. PyJAMAS: open-source, multimodal segmentation and analysis of microscopy images. Bioinformatics 38: 594-596.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/bioinformatics/btab589"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Zallen JA. 2013. Wounded cells drive rapid epidermal repair in the early<i>Drosophila</i>embryo. Molecular Biology of the Cell 24: 3227-3237.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1091/mbc.e13-05-0228"},{"reference":"<p>Gittenberger-de Groot AC, Bartelings MM, Deruiter MC, Poelmann RE. 2005. Basics of Cardiac Development for the Understanding of Congenital Heart Malformations. Pediatric Research 57: 169-176.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1203/01.PDR.0000148710.69159.61"},{"reference":"<p>Haack T, Schneider M, Schwendele B, Renault AD. 2014. Drosophila heart cell movement to the midline occurs through both cell autonomous migration and dorsal closure. Developmental Biology 396: 169-182.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.08.033"},{"reference":"<p>Hartenstein V. 1993. Atlas of Drosophila Development. The Development of Drosophila Melanogaster, vol. 3. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. </p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Hawkins R, Balaghi N, Rothenberg KE, Ly M, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2025. ReSCU-Nets: Recurrent U-Nets for segmentation of three-dimensional microscopy data. Journal of Cell Biology 224: 10.1083/jcb.202506102.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.202506102"},{"reference":"<p>Ivanovitch K, Temiño S, Torres M. 2017. Live imaging of heart tube development in mouse reveals alternating phases of cardiac differentiation and morphogenesis. eLife 6: 10.7554/elife.30668.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.7554/eLife.30668"},{"reference":"<p>Jin H, Stojnic R, Adryan B, Ozdemir A, Stathopoulos A, Frasch M. 2013. Genome-Wide Screens for In Vivo Tinman Binding Sites Identify Cardiac Enhancers with Diverse Functional Architectures. PLoS Genetics 9: e1003195.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1371/journal.pgen.1003195"},{"reference":"<p>Kelly RG, Brown NA, Buckingham ME. 2001. The Arterial Pole of the Mouse Heart Forms from Fgf10-Expressing Cells in Pharyngeal Mesoderm. Developmental Cell 1: 435-440.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S1534-5807(01)00040-5"},{"reference":"<p>Marpeaux La, Baudouin C, Alberici Delsin LE, Plutoni Cd, Emery G. 2026. A supracellular actin network transmits forces over long distances at the apical surface of squamous carcinoma cells. Journal of Cell Science 139: 10.1242/jcs.264424.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1242/jcs.264424"},{"reference":"<p>McFaul CMJ, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2017. Shape of my heart: Cell-cell adhesion and cytoskeletal dynamics during Drosophila cardiac morphogenesis. Experimental Cell Research 358: 65-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.yexcr.2017.03.057"},{"reference":"<p>Mercuro G, Bassareo PP, Mariucci E, Deidda M, Zedda AM, Bonvicini M. 2014. Sex differences in congenital heart defects and genetically induced arrhythmias. Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine 15: 855-863.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.2459/JCM.0b013e32835ec828"},{"reference":"<p>Moorman AFM, Christoffels VM. 2003. Cardiac Chamber Formation: Development, Genes, and Evolution. Physiological Reviews 83: 1223-1267.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1152/physrev.00006.2003"},{"reference":"<p>Öztürk-Çolak A, Marygold SJ, Antonazzo G, Attrill H, Goutte-Gattat D, Jenkins VK, et al., Lovato. 2024. FlyBase: updates to the\n                    <i>Drosophila</i>\n                    genes and genomes database. GENETICS 227: 10.1093/genetics/iyad211.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/genetics/iyad211"},{"reference":"<p>Pugnaloni F, Felici A, Corno AF, Marino B, Versacci P, Putotto C. 2023. Gender differences in congenital heart defects: a narrative review. Translational Pediatrics 12: 1753-1764.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.21037/tp-23-260"},{"reference":"<p>Scepanovic G, Florea A, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2020. Multiscale In Vivo Imaging of Collective Cell Migration in Drosophila Embryos. Methods in Molecular Biology,The Epithelial-to Mesenchymal Transition : 199-224.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1007/978-1-0716-0779-4_17"},{"reference":"<p>Schindelin J, Arganda-Carreras I, Frise E, Kaynig V, Longair M, Pietzsch T, et al., Cardona. 2012. Fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis. Nature Methods 9: 676-682.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nmeth.2019"},{"reference":"<p>Sinha T, Li D, Théveniau-Ruissy M, Hutson MR, Kelly RG, Wang J. 2014. Loss of Wnt5a disrupts second heart field cell deployment and may contribute to OFT malformations in DiGeorge syndrome. Human Molecular Genetics 24: 1704-1716.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/hmg/ddu584"},{"reference":"<p>Souidi A, Jagla K. 2021. Drosophila Heart as a Model for Cardiac Development and Diseases. Cells 10: 3078.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3390/cells10113078"},{"reference":"<p>Thomson, J., Graham, P., Schedl, P., &amp; Pulak, R. 2004. Sex-specific GFP-expression in Drosophila embryos and sorting by Copas flow cytometry technique. 45th Annual Drosophila Research Conference, Washington DC (USA).</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Zimmerman MS, Smith AGC, Sable CA, Echko MM, Wilner LB, Olsen HE, et al., Kassebaum. 2020. Global, regional, and national burden of congenital heart disease, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet Child &amp; Adolescent Health 4: 185-200.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30402-X"}],"title":"<p>Quantitative image analysis reveals no sexual dimorphism in the cellular dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation</p>","reviews":[{"reviewer":{"displayName":"Shaad Ahmad"},"openAcknowledgement":true,"status":{"submitted":true}}],"curatorReviews":[{"curator":{"displayName":"FlyBase Curators"},"openAcknowledgement":false,"submitted":null}]},{"id":"63405823-87bc-438e-b840-c997a4bead17","decision":"accept","abstract":"<p>Congenital heart defects affect females and males differently. Several congenital heart defects arise during the formation of the heart tube, suggesting that heart tube morphogenesis may differ between females and males. We investigated if the fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>displays sexual dimorphisms in the cellular mechanisms of heart tube formation. Quantitative microscopy revealed no differences between females and males in the migration of cardiac progenitors to form the heart tube. Our results suggest that <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms in early cardiac development, and support the omission of sex as an experimental variable when investigating <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube morphogenesis.</p>","acknowledgements":"<p>We are grateful to Ana Maria do Carmo, Alexandra Korolov, Willow Peterson and Ji Hong Sayo for critical reading of this manuscript. RPV was partially supported by the Undergraduate Summer Research Program of the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program.</p>","authors":[{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research","Division of Engineering Science"],"credit":["formalAnalysis","dataCuration","fundingAcquisition","investigation","methodology","software","validation","visualization","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"rafa.perez@mail.utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rafael","lastName":"Perez-Vicente","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research"],"credit":["investigation","methodology","software","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"negar.balaghi@MAIL.UTORONTO.CA","firstName":"Negar","lastName":"Balaghi","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research, Translational Biology and Engineering Program","Department of Cell and Systems Biology","Developmental and Stem Cell Biology Program"],"credit":["conceptualization","fundingAcquisition","methodology","project","resources","software","supervision","validation","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing","investigation"],"email":"rodrigo.fernandez.gonzalez@utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rodrigo","lastName":"Fernandez-Gonzalez","submittingAuthor":true,"correspondingAuthor":true,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":"0000-0003-0770-744X"}],"awards":[],"conflictsOfInterest":"<p>The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest present.</p>","dataTable":{"url":null},"extendedData":[{"description":"<p>Video S1. Tissue dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Heart tube closure in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe-GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS1.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/54de77f810dd499f012aaa738a2c5ead.mp4"},{"description":"<p>Video S2. Cardioblast dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Cardioblast migration in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker MidE19:GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS2.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/5606e9f5729aa9005bc4c4174b4ff47b.mp4"}],"funding":"<p>This work was funded by grants to RFG from the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-2025-04527), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (30279 and 43988) and Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program. RFG is the Tier II Canada Research Chair in Quantitative Cell Biology and Morphogenesis.</p>","image":{"url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/18d78de6bdf653e19c4ba2a04a6e6772.png"},"imageCaption":"<p><b>(A, G) </b>Heart tube closure (A) and cardioblast migration (G) in female (A, G, orange in A'', G'') or male (A', G', blue in A'', G'') embryos expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe-GFP (A), or the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (G). The dominant orange hue outside the heart in (A'') indicates sxl-Pe-GFP expression. Shading in (A-A') indicates the luminal area. Dashed rectangles show the regions used to generate kymographs of matching cable regions (A-B) and contralateral cardioblasts (G-H). <b>(B, H)</b> Kymographs of the dashed regions in (A) and (G), respectively. <b>(C-F)</b> Luminal area (C), heart tube closure rate constant (D), luminal circularity (E), and maximum anterior-posterior (AP) and medial-lateral (ML) luminal lengths (F) for females (orange, <i>n</i> = 7 embryos) or males (blue, <i>n</i> = 8). <b>(I-L)</b> Distance between contralateral pairs of cardioblasts (I), cardioblast speed (J), period of oscillation (K), and net medial step (L) in females (orange, 152 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos), or males (blue, 184 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos). (A, B, G, H) Anterior, left; medial, centre. Bars, 20 μm (A, G) or 5 min (B, H). (C, E-F, I) Error bars show the standard error of the mean. (D, J-K) Line indicates the mean, boxes show the standard error of the mean, bars indicate the standard deviation.</p>","imageTitle":"<p>The tissue and cell dynamics of <i>Drosophila</i> heart tube formation show no sexual dimorphism</p>","methods":"<p><b>Fly stocks</b></p><p>We used Flybase (release FB2025_03) to find information on stocks and gene expression (Öztürk-Çolak et al., 2024). <i>D. melanogaster </i>strains (see Resources and Reagents) were kept at room temperature on fly food provided by a central kitchen operated by H. Lipshitz. Embryos were collected overnight on apple juice agar plates in plastic cages at room temperature (~23°C). Stage 14-15 embryos (collected 12-14 hours after egg laying) were used.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>We used <i>mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP </i>(Jin et al., 2013) to image cardioblast nuclei and <i>hand-GFP:moesinABD </i>(Haack et al., 2014)<i> </i>to visualize F-actin in the heart. <i>sxl-Pe-GFP </i>(Thomson et al., 2004)<i> </i>(Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center #32565) was used to identify female embryos based on the expression of cytoplasmic GFP driven by the female-specific <i>sxl-pe </i>promoter.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Timelapse imaging</b></p><p>Embryos were dechorionated in 50% bleach in water for 2 minutes, rinsed and glued dorsal side down on a glass coverslip using heptane (Caledon Laboratory Chemicals) glue. Embryos were covered in a 1:1 mix of halocarbon oil 27 and 700 (Sigma-Aldrich) for live imaging (Scepanovic et al., 2021). We imaged embryos on a Revolution XD spinning disk confocal microscope (Andor) equipped with an iXon Ultra 897 camera, a 10x air lens (NA 0.40, Olympus) and a 60x oil-immersion lens (NA 1.35, Olympus). We acquired sixteen-bit Z-stacks every 15 seconds at 0<b>.</b>5<b> </b>or 0<b>.</b>75 µm<b> </b>steps (21 to 37 slices per stack) using Metamorph Software (Molecular Devices). Maximum intensity projections of the stacks were generated with Fiji (Schindelin et al., 2012) and used for analysis.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Sex classification</b></p><p>Embryonic sex was determined either by using sxl-Pe-GFP expression to identify female embryos prior to imaging, or by allowing embryos to develop after imaging and using gonad morphology in the larva and both gonad and body morphology in the adult to assign a sex to the corresponding movie (Hartenstein, 1993). Individual embryos were transferred to yeasted apple agar plates after imaging and allowed to develop at room temperature until third instar larva (5-6 days) or adult (12-14 days) stages.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Image quantification</b></p><p>Automated object segmentation, editing and analysis were performed using our open-source image analysis platform, PyJAMAS (Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022). For object segmentation, the LiveWire algorithm (Fernandez-Gonzalez &amp; Zallen, 2013) was used to semi-automatically annotate heart lumens and cardioblast nuclei. We used semi-automated annotations to train a ReSCU-Net and a U-Net for luminal and nuclear segmentation, respectively (Falk et al., 2019; Hawkins et al., 2025). The heart tube closure rate constant, <i>k</i>, was defined by fitting the luminal area over time with a decaying exponential:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) = <i>A</i>e<sup>-</sup><i><sup>kt</sup></i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (1),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>a</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>is the luminal area at time <i>t</i>, and <i>A</i> is the maximum luminal area. Time <i>t</i> is with respect to the last time at which the maximum distance between contralateral F-actin cables, measured parallel to the ML axis, was greater than 80 μm (Fig. 1A-F); or the last time at which the mean distance between contralateral cardioblast nuclei was greater than 65 µm (Fig. 1G-L). We quantified the maximum AP and ML luminal lengths by rotating the luminal annotations such that the longest axis was perpendicular to the horizontal axis, and measuring the difference between the maximum and minimum x-coordinates (ML length) or y-coordinates (AP length). Luminal circularity at time <i>t</i>, <i>c</i>(<i>t</i>), was calculated as:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>c</i>(<i>t</i>) = 4π<i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) / <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<sup>2</sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>represents the luminal perimeter at time <i>t</i>. Cardioblast positions were determined using the centroid of the cardioblast nucleus (Balaghi et al., 2023). The speed of cardioblast migration was the slope of a line fitted to the distance travelled by individual nuclei over time. The period of oscillation was measured as the time lag of the first peak of the autocorrelation of each cardioblast velocity curve.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Statistical analysis</b></p><p>Embryonic means were compared using non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests. For time series, error bars indicate the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.). In box plots, error bars show the s.d., boxes indicate the s.e.m., and a line inside the box denotes the mean.</p>","reagents":"<table><tbody><tr><td><p><b>Reagent or resource</b></p></td><td><p><b>Source</b></p></td><td><p><b>Identifier</b></p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Experimental models: organisms/strains</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Jin et al., 2013)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: hand- GFP:moesinABD</i></p></td><td><p>(Haack et al., 2014)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster:</i></p><p><i>sxl-Pe-GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Thomson et al., 2004), Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center</p></td><td><p>32565</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Chemicals</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Heptane</p></td><td><p>Caledon Laboratory Chemicals</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 5400-1-10</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 27</p></td><td><p>Sigma Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 118773</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 100</p></td><td><p>Sigma Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 118898</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Software</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>PyJAMAS</p></td><td><p>(Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022)</p></td><td><p>pyjamas.readthedocs.io</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Fiji</p></td><td><p>(Schindelin et al., 2012)</p></td><td><p>imagej.net</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>MetaMorph</p></td><td><p>Molecular Devices</p></td><td><p>RRID:SCR,_002368</p></td></tr></tbody></table>","patternDescription":"<p>Congenital heart defects (CHDs) remain the leading birth defect (Zimmerman et al., 2020; Dotson et al., 2024). Anomalies in the early stages of heart development are associated with embryonic lethality and several CHDs (Gittenberger-de Groot et al., 2005; Bruneau, 2008; Ivanovitch et al., 2017). This includes outflow tract malformations, which account for 30% of CHDs (Sinha et al., 2015). A clear sexual dimorphism exists on the incidence of CHDs and outflow tract defects in particular (Mercuro et al., 2014; Deegan et al., 2021; Pugnaloni et al., 2023). Abnormal heart tube development is often a consequence of the defective migration of cardiac progenitors (Kelly et al., 2001; Sinha et al., 2015). Whether differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation underlie the sexual dimorphisms in CHD has not been investigated.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>is an excellent system to investigate the dynamics of cardiac morphogenesis. In both vertebrates and invertebrates heart development begins with the formation of a tube (Bodmer, 1995; Moorman &amp; Christoffels, 2003; Souidi &amp; Jagla, 2021). The heart tube forms as two groups of cardiac progenitors move toward each other from opposite sides of the embryo. In <i>Drosophila</i>, two contralateral rows of 52 cardiac progenitors (cardioblasts) each, migrate toward the dorsal midline, where they meet and form a tube (McFaul &amp; Fernandez-Gonzalez, 2017). We showed that cardioblasts do not move monotonically forward (Balaghi et al., 2023). Instead, cardioblasts take cyclic forward and backward steps associated with waves of the molecular motor non-muscle myosin II and periodic cell shape changes. Periodic cardioblast steps are rectified into directional movement by a supracellular cable formed by the cytoskeletal protein filamentous actin (F-actin) at the trailing edge of cardioblasts. Potential differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos have not been investigated.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>To establish if there are differences in tissue dynamics between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos during heart tube formation, we imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing the cardiac-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD (Haack et al., 2014), and sxl-Pe:GFP (Thomson et al., 2004), which displays female-specific cytoplasmic GFP expression (Fig. 1A-A'', 0 min). Visual inspection did not reveal any significant differences in dynamics of heart tube formation between females and males (Fig. 1A'', B and Video S1). We used a recurrent neural network architecture, ReSCU-Net (Hawkins et al., 2025), to automatically trace the outline of the heart. We quantified luminal area changes over time (Fig. 1C) and fitted an exponential decay to the luminal area measurements to extract a heart tube closure rate constant (Fig. 1D). We found that the heart tube closed with a rate constant of 1.4±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> (mean±standard deviation, s.d.) in female embryos, similar to the closure rate constant of 1.2±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> in male embryos (Fig. 1D). To further determine if there were differences in the morphology of the heart tube as it formed, we quantified the circularity and maximum length of the luminal area along the anterior-posterior and medial-lateral axes of the embryo (Fig. 1E-F). Consistent with our measurements of heart tube closure dynamics, we found no differences in heart tube morphology between female and male embryos. Thus, our results suggest no sexual dimorphism exists in the tissue dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube closure.</p><p><b>&nbsp;</b></p><p>To further determine if there are differences in the cellular behaviours associated with heart tube formation in <i>Drosophila,</i> we measured cardioblast migration dynamics during heart tube development (Fig. 1G-H and Video S2). We imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing a cardioblast-specific nuclear marker, Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (Jin et al., 2013). We previously showed that nuclear dynamics match cellular dynamics in <i>Drosophila </i>cardioblasts (Balaghi et al., 2023). After imaging, embryos were allowed to develop into larvae and adults, and were sexed based on gonad or body morphology (Hartenstein, 1993). We automatically outlined cell nuclei from confocal microscopy movies using a U-Net, a convolutional neural network architecture (Falk et al., 2019; Balaghi et al., 2023). We found that cardioblasts migrated towards the dorsal midline at a similar speed in both females and males (23.0±6.7 μm/hr <i>vs. </i>22.4±3.3 μm/hr, respectively, Fig. 1I-J). To further establish if the mechanisms of cell movement varied between females and males, we quantified the oscillatory dynamics of cardioblast nuclei. Our results showed that the period of cardioblast oscillation was not significantly different between females and males (1.7±0.8 min <i>vs. </i>1.4±0.8 min, respectively, Fig. 1K). We could not detect any differences in the amplitude of the medial (1.9±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>2.0±0.2 μm for males) or lateral (0.8±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>0.7±0.1 μm for males) steps, with comparable net medial steps of 1.2±0.2 μm in females and<i> </i>1.3±0.2 μm in males (Fig. 1L). Thus, our results indicate that there are no sexual dimorphisms in the dynamics of cardioblast migration during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Altogether, our results suggest that the early stages of heart development in <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms, at least not at the level of cellular or tissue dynamics. The oscillatory movement of cardioblasts and the coordination of cardioblast migration is driven by periodic myosin waves and a supracellular F-actin cable (Balaghi et al., 2023). Thus, our results suggest that the cytoskeletal structures associated with heart tube formation will be similar between females and males. This is consistent with evidence from other systems in which actomyosin-based cytoskeletal networks drive collective cell movement. For example, the wound healing response in monolayer epithelia of both female and male origin is associated with a supracellular actomyosin cable that guides and coordinates cell movements (Bement et al., 1993; Marpeaux et al., 2026). Our data support the omission of sex as a biological variable in studies of cellular dynamics during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation. However, a limitation of our assay is that we did not quantify cell or tissue dynamics in naturally-occurring abnormal hearts (e.g. missing cardioblasts). Further studies measuring the relative incidence of defective heart tubes in females and males, at embryonic, larval, and adult stages, will reveal the extent to which <i>Drosophila </i>can be used to model sexual dimorphisms in CHDs.</p>","references":[{"reference":"<p>Balaghi N, Erdemci-Tandogan G, McFaul C, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2023. Myosin waves and a mechanical asymmetry guide the oscillatory migration of Drosophila cardiac progenitors. Dev Cell 58(14): 1299-1313.e5.</p>","pubmedId":"37295436","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Bement WM, Forscher P, Mooseker MS. 1993. A novel cytoskeletal structure involved in purse string wound closure and cell polarity maintenance.. The Journal of cell biology 121: 565-578.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.121.3.565"},{"reference":"<p>Bodmer R. 1995. Heart development in Drosophila and its relationship to vertebrates. Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine 5: 21-28.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/1050-1738(94)00032-Q"},{"reference":"<p>Bruneau BG. 2008. The developmental genetics of congenital heart disease. Nature 451: 943-948.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nature06801"},{"reference":"<p>Deegan DF, Nigam P, Engel N. 2021. Sexual Dimorphism of the Heart: Genetics, Epigenetics, and Development. Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 8: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252"},{"reference":"<p>Dotson A, Covas T, Halstater B, Ragsdale J. 2024. Congenital Heart Disease. Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice 51: 125-142.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.pop.2023.07.007"},{"reference":"<p>Falk T, Mai D, Bensch R, Çiçek zn, Abdulkadir A, Marrakchi Y, et al., Ronneberger. 2018. U-Net: deep learning for cell counting, detection, and morphometry. Nature Methods 16: 67-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/s41592-018-0261-2"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Balaghi N, Wang K, Hawkins R, Rothenberg K, McFaul C, et al., Castle. 2021. PyJAMAS: open-source, multimodal segmentation and analysis of microscopy images. Bioinformatics 38: 594-596.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/bioinformatics/btab589"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Zallen JA. 2013. Wounded cells drive rapid epidermal repair in the early<i>Drosophila</i>embryo. Molecular Biology of the Cell 24: 3227-3237.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1091/mbc.e13-05-0228"},{"reference":"<p>Gittenberger-de Groot AC, Bartelings MM, Deruiter MC, Poelmann RE. 2005. Basics of Cardiac Development for the Understanding of Congenital Heart Malformations. Pediatric Research 57: 169-176.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1203/01.PDR.0000148710.69159.61"},{"reference":"<p>Haack T, Schneider M, Schwendele B, Renault AD. 2014. Drosophila heart cell movement to the midline occurs through both cell autonomous migration and dorsal closure. Developmental Biology 396: 169-182.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.08.033"},{"reference":"<p>Hartenstein V. 1993. Atlas of Drosophila Development. The Development of Drosophila Melanogaster, vol. 3. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. </p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Hawkins R, Balaghi N, Rothenberg KE, Ly M, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2025. ReSCU-Nets: Recurrent U-Nets for segmentation of three-dimensional microscopy data. Journal of Cell Biology 224: 10.1083/jcb.202506102.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.202506102"},{"reference":"<p>Ivanovitch K, Temiño S, Torres M. 2017. Live imaging of heart tube development in mouse reveals alternating phases of cardiac differentiation and morphogenesis. eLife 6: 10.7554/elife.30668.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.7554/eLife.30668"},{"reference":"<p>Jin H, Stojnic R, Adryan B, Ozdemir A, Stathopoulos A, Frasch M. 2013. Genome-Wide Screens for In Vivo Tinman Binding Sites Identify Cardiac Enhancers with Diverse Functional Architectures. PLoS Genetics 9: e1003195.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1371/journal.pgen.1003195"},{"reference":"<p>Kelly RG, Brown NA, Buckingham ME. 2001. The Arterial Pole of the Mouse Heart Forms from Fgf10-Expressing Cells in Pharyngeal Mesoderm. Developmental Cell 1: 435-440.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S1534-5807(01)00040-5"},{"reference":"<p>Marpeaux La, Baudouin C, Alberici Delsin LE, Plutoni Cd, Emery G. 2026. A supracellular actin network transmits forces over long distances at the apical surface of squamous carcinoma cells. Journal of Cell Science 139: 10.1242/jcs.264424.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1242/jcs.264424"},{"reference":"<p>McFaul CMJ, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2017. Shape of my heart: Cell-cell adhesion and cytoskeletal dynamics during Drosophila cardiac morphogenesis. Experimental Cell Research 358: 65-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.yexcr.2017.03.057"},{"reference":"<p>Mercuro G, Bassareo PP, Mariucci E, Deidda M, Zedda AM, Bonvicini M. 2014. Sex differences in congenital heart defects and genetically induced arrhythmias. Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine 15: 855-863.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.2459/JCM.0b013e32835ec828"},{"reference":"<p>Moorman AFM, Christoffels VM. 2003. Cardiac Chamber Formation: Development, Genes, and Evolution. Physiological Reviews 83: 1223-1267.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1152/physrev.00006.2003"},{"reference":"<p>Öztürk-Çolak A, Marygold SJ, Antonazzo G, Attrill H, Goutte-Gattat D, Jenkins VK, et al., Lovato. 2024. FlyBase: updates to the\n                    <i>Drosophila</i>\n                    genes and genomes database. GENETICS 227: 10.1093/genetics/iyad211.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/genetics/iyad211"},{"reference":"<p>Pugnaloni F, Felici A, Corno AF, Marino B, Versacci P, Putotto C. 2023. Gender differences in congenital heart defects: a narrative review. Translational Pediatrics 12: 1753-1764.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.21037/tp-23-260"},{"reference":"<p>Scepanovic G, Florea A, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2020. Multiscale In Vivo Imaging of Collective Cell Migration in Drosophila Embryos. Methods in Molecular Biology,The Epithelial-to Mesenchymal Transition : 199-224.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1007/978-1-0716-0779-4_17"},{"reference":"<p>Schindelin J, Arganda-Carreras I, Frise E, Kaynig V, Longair M, Pietzsch T, et al., Cardona. 2012. Fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis. Nature Methods 9: 676-682.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nmeth.2019"},{"reference":"<p>Sinha T, Li D, Théveniau-Ruissy M, Hutson MR, Kelly RG, Wang J. 2014. Loss of Wnt5a disrupts second heart field cell deployment and may contribute to OFT malformations in DiGeorge syndrome. Human Molecular Genetics 24: 1704-1716.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/hmg/ddu584"},{"reference":"<p>Souidi A, Jagla K. 2021. Drosophila Heart as a Model for Cardiac Development and Diseases. Cells 10: 3078.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3390/cells10113078"},{"reference":"<p>Thomson, J., Graham, P., Schedl, P., &amp; Pulak, R. 2004. Sex-specific GFP-expression in Drosophila embryos and sorting by Copas flow cytometry technique. 45th Annual Drosophila Research Conference, Washington DC (USA).</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Zimmerman MS, Smith AGC, Sable CA, Echko MM, Wilner LB, Olsen HE, et al., Kassebaum. 2020. Global, regional, and national burden of congenital heart disease, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet Child &amp; Adolescent Health 4: 185-200.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30402-X"}],"title":"<p>Quantitative image analysis reveals no sexual dimorphism in the cellular dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation</p>","reviews":[{"reviewer":{"displayName":"Shaad Ahmad"},"openAcknowledgement":true,"status":{"submitted":true}}],"curatorReviews":[{"curator":{"displayName":"FlyBase Curators"},"openAcknowledgement":false,"submitted":"1779085598290"}]},{"id":"0a8100b6-653f-4a58-930f-d96951809a0b","decision":"publish","abstract":"<p>Congenital heart defects affect females and males differently. Several congenital heart defects arise during the formation of the heart tube, suggesting that heart tube morphogenesis may differ between females and males. We investigated if the fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>displays sexual dimorphisms in the cellular mechanisms of heart tube formation. Quantitative microscopy revealed no differences between females and males in the migration of cardiac progenitors to form the heart tube. Our results suggest that <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms in early cardiac development, and support the omission of sex as an experimental variable when investigating <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube morphogenesis.</p>","acknowledgements":"<p>We are grateful to Ana Maria do Carmo, Alexandra Korolov, Willow Peterson and Ji Hong Sayo for critical reading of this manuscript. RPV was partially supported by the Undergraduate Summer Research Program of the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program.</p>","authors":[{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research","Division of Engineering Science"],"credit":["formalAnalysis","dataCuration","fundingAcquisition","investigation","methodology","software","validation","visualization","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"rafa.perez@mail.utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rafael","lastName":"Perez-Vicente","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research"],"credit":["investigation","methodology","software","writing_reviewEditing"],"email":"negar.balaghi@MAIL.UTORONTO.CA","firstName":"Negar","lastName":"Balaghi","submittingAuthor":false,"correspondingAuthor":false,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":null},{"affiliations":["University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA","Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, CA"],"departments":["Institute of Biomedical Engineering","Translational Biology and Engineering Program, Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research","Department of Cell and Systems Biology","Developmental and Stem Cell Biology Program"],"credit":["conceptualization","fundingAcquisition","methodology","project","resources","software","supervision","validation","writing_originalDraft","writing_reviewEditing","investigation"],"email":"rodrigo.fernandez.gonzalez@utoronto.ca","firstName":"Rodrigo","lastName":"Fernandez-Gonzalez","submittingAuthor":true,"correspondingAuthor":true,"equalContribution":false,"WBId":null,"orcid":"0000-0003-0770-744X"}],"awards":[],"conflictsOfInterest":"<p>The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest present.</p>","dataTable":{"url":null},"extendedData":[{"description":"<p>Video S1. Tissue dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Heart tube closure in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe:GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS1.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/54de77f810dd499f012aaa738a2c5ead.mp4"},{"description":"<p>Video S2. Cardioblast dynamics during Drosophila heart tube formation are similar between female and male embryos. Cardioblast migration in a female (left, orange in merge) and a male (centre, blue in merge) embryo expressing the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker MidE19:GFP. Images were acquired every 15 s. Anterior left; medial, centre.</p>","doi":null,"resourceType":"Audiovisual","name":"perezvicente2026_videoS2.mp4","url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/5606e9f5729aa9005bc4c4174b4ff47b.mp4"}],"funding":"<p>This work was funded by grants to RFG from the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-2025-04527), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (30279 and 43988) and Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research Translational Biology and Engineering Program. RFG is the Tier II Canada Research Chair in Quantitative Cell Biology and Morphogenesis.</p>","image":{"url":"https://portal.micropublication.org/uploads/18d78de6bdf653e19c4ba2a04a6e6772.png"},"imageCaption":"<p><b>(A, G) </b>Heart tube closure (A) and cardioblast migration (G) in female (A, G, orange in A'', G'') or male (A', G', blue in A'', G'') embryos expressing the heart-specific F-actin reporter hand-GFP:MoesinABD and the female-specific reporter sxl-Pe:GFP (A), or the cardioblast-specific nuclear marker Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (G). The orange hue outside the heart in (A'') corresponds to sxl-Pe:GFP expression. Shading in (A-A') indicates the luminal area. Dashed rectangles show the regions used to generate kymographs of matching cable regions (A-B) and contralateral cardioblasts (G-H). <b>(B, H)</b> Kymographs of the dashed regions in (A) and (G), respectively. <b>(C-F)</b> Luminal area (C), heart tube closure rate constant (D), luminal circularity (E), and maximum anterior-posterior (AP) and medial-lateral (ML) luminal lengths (F) for females (orange, <i>n</i> = 7 embryos) or males (blue, <i>n</i> = 8). <b>(I-L)</b> Distance between contralateral pairs of cardioblasts (I), cardioblast speed (J), period of oscillation (K), and net medial step (L) in females (orange, 152 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos), or males (blue, 184 cardioblasts in <i>n</i> = 6 embryos). (A, B, G, H) Anterior, left; medial, centre. Bars, 20 μm (A, G) or 5 min (B, H). (C, E-F, I) Error bars show the standard error of the mean. (D, J-K) Line indicates the mean, boxes show the standard error of the mean, bars indicate the standard deviation. n.s. not significant.</p>","imageTitle":"<p>The tissue and cell dynamics of <i>Drosophila</i> heart tube formation show no sexual dimorphism</p>","methods":"<p><b>Fly stocks</b></p><p>We used Flybase (release FB2025_03) to find information on stocks and gene expression (Öztürk-Çolak et al., 2024). <i>D. melanogaster </i>strains (see Resources and Reagents) were kept at room temperature on fly food provided by a central kitchen operated by H. Lipshitz. Embryos were collected overnight on apple juice agar plates in plastic cages at room temperature (~23°C). Stage 14-15 embryos (collected 12-14 hours after egg laying) were used.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>We used <i>mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP </i>(Jin et al., 2013) to image cardioblast nuclei and <i>hand-GFP:moesinABD </i>(Haack et al., 2014)<i> </i>to visualize F-actin in the heart. <i>sxl-Pe:GFP </i>(Thomson et al., 2004)<i> </i>(Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center #32565) was used to identify female embryos based on the expression of cytoplasmic GFP driven by the female-specific <i>sxl-pe </i>promoter.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Timelapse imaging</b></p><p>Embryos were dechorionated in 50% bleach in water for 2 minutes, rinsed and glued dorsal side down on a glass coverslip using heptane (Caledon Laboratory Chemicals) glue. Embryos were covered in a 1:1 mix of halocarbon oil 27 and 700 (Sigma-Aldrich) for live imaging (Scepanovic et al., 2021). We imaged embryos on a Revolution XD spinning disk confocal microscope (Andor) equipped with an iXon Ultra 897 camera, a 10x air lens (NA 0.40, Olympus) and a 60x oil-immersion lens (NA 1.35, Olympus). We acquired sixteen-bit Z-stacks every 15 seconds at 0<b>.</b>5<b> </b>or 0<b>.</b>75 µm<b> </b>steps (21 to 37 slices per stack) using Metamorph Software (Molecular Devices). Maximum intensity projections of the stacks were generated with Fiji (Schindelin et al., 2012) and used for analysis.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Sex classification</b></p><p>Embryonic sex was determined either by using sxl-Pe:GFP expression to identify female embryos prior to imaging, or by allowing embryos to develop after imaging and using gonad morphology in the larva and both gonad and body morphology in the adult to assign a sex to the corresponding movie (Hartenstein, 1993). Individual embryos were transferred to yeasted apple agar plates after imaging and allowed to develop at room temperature until third instar larva (5-6 days) or adult (12-14 days) stages.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Image quantification</b></p><p>Automated object segmentation, editing and analysis were performed using our open-source image analysis platform, PyJAMAS (Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022). For object segmentation, the LiveWire algorithm (Fernandez-Gonzalez &amp; Zallen, 2013) was used to semi-automatically annotate heart lumens and cardioblast nuclei. We used semi-automated annotations to train a ReSCU-Net and a U-Net for luminal and nuclear segmentation, respectively (Falk et al., 2019; Hawkins et al., 2025). The heart tube closure rate constant, <i>k</i>, was defined by fitting the luminal area over time with a decaying exponential:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) = <i>A</i>e<sup>-</sup><i><sup>kt</sup></i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (1),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>a</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>is the luminal area at time <i>t</i>, and <i>A</i> is the maximum luminal area. Time <i>t</i> is with respect to the last time at which the maximum distance between contralateral F-actin cables, measured parallel to the ML axis, was greater than 80 μm (Fig. 1A-F); or the last time at which the mean distance between contralateral cardioblast nuclei was greater than 65 µm (Fig. 1G-L). We quantified the maximum AP and ML luminal lengths by rotating the luminal annotations such that the longest axis was perpendicular to the horizontal axis, and measuring the difference between the maximum and minimum x-coordinates (ML length) or y-coordinates (AP length). Luminal circularity at time <i>t</i>, <i>c</i>(<i>t</i>), was calculated as:</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><i>c</i>(<i>t</i>) = 4π<i>a</i>(<i>t</i>) / <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<sup>2</sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2),</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>where <i>p</i>(<i>t</i>)<i> </i>represents the luminal perimeter at time <i>t</i>. Cardioblast positions were determined using the centroid of the cardioblast nucleus (Balaghi et al., 2023). The speed of cardioblast migration was the slope of a line fitted to the distance travelled by individual nuclei over time. The period of oscillation was measured as the time lag of the first peak of the autocorrelation of each cardioblast velocity curve.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><b>Statistical analysis</b></p><p>Embryonic means were compared using non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests. For time series, error bars indicate the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.). In box plots, error bars show the s.d., boxes indicate the s.e.m., and a line inside the box denotes the mean.</p>","reagents":"<table><tbody><tr><td><p><b>Reagent or resource</b></p></td><td><p><b>Source</b></p></td><td><p><b>Identifier</b></p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Experimental models: organisms/strains</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Jin et al., 2013)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster: hand- GFP:moesinABD</i></p></td><td><p>(Haack et al., 2014)</p></td><td><p>N/A</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><i>D. melanogaster:</i></p><p><i>sxl-Pe-GFP</i></p></td><td><p>(Thomson et al., 2004), Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center</p></td><td><p>32565</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Chemicals</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Heptane</p></td><td><p>Caledon Laboratory Chemicals</p></td><td><p>Cat #: 5400-1-10</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 27</p></td><td><p>Sigma-Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: H8773</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Halocarbon oil 700</p></td><td><p>Sigma-Aldrich</p></td><td><p>Cat #: H8898</p></td></tr><tr><td colspan=\"3\"><p><b>Software</b></p></td></tr><tr><td><p>PyJAMAS</p></td><td><p>(Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2022)</p></td><td><p>pyjamas.readthedocs.io</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>Fiji</p></td><td><p>(Schindelin et al., 2012)</p></td><td><p>imagej.net</p></td></tr><tr><td><p>MetaMorph</p></td><td><p>Molecular Devices</p></td><td><p>RRID:SCR_002368</p></td></tr></tbody></table>","patternDescription":"<p>Congenital heart defects (CHDs) remain the leading birth defect (Zimmerman et al., 2020; Dotson et al., 2024). Anomalies in the early stages of heart development are associated with embryonic lethality and several CHDs (Gittenberger-de Groot et al., 2005; Bruneau, 2008; Ivanovitch et al., 2017). This includes outflow tract malformations, which account for 30% of CHDs (Sinha et al., 2015). A clear sexual dimorphism exists on the incidence of CHDs and outflow tract defects in particular (Mercuro et al., 2014; Deegan et al., 2021; Pugnaloni et al., 2023). Abnormal heart tube development is often a consequence of the defective migration of cardiac progenitors (Kelly et al., 2001; Sinha et al., 2015). It is not known whether differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation underlie the sexual dimorphisms in CHD.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The fruit fly <i>Drosophila melanogaster </i>is an excellent system to investigate the dynamics of cardiac morphogenesis. In both vertebrates and invertebrates heart development begins with the formation of a tube (Bodmer, 1995; Moorman &amp; Christoffels, 2003; Souidi &amp; Jagla, 2021). The heart tube forms as two groups of cardiac progenitors move toward each other from opposite sides of the embryo. In <i>Drosophila</i>, two contralateral rows of 52 cardiac progenitors (cardioblasts) each, migrate toward the dorsal midline, where they meet and form a tube (McFaul &amp; Fernandez-Gonzalez, 2017). We showed that cardioblasts do not move monotonically forward (Balaghi et al., 2023). Instead, cardioblasts take cyclic forward and backward steps associated with waves of the molecular motor non-muscle myosin II and periodic cell shape changes. Periodic cardioblast steps are rectified into directional movement by a supracellular cable formed by the cytoskeletal protein filamentous actin (F-actin) at the trailing edge of cardioblasts. Potential differences in the cellular dynamics of heart tube formation between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos have not been investigated.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>To establish if there are differences in tissue dynamics between female and male <i>Drosophila </i>embryos during heart tube formation, we imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing hand-GFP:MoesinABD (Haack et al., 2014), a cardiac F-actin reporter, and sxl-Pe:GFP (Thomson et al., 2004), which displays female-specific cytoplasmic GFP expression (Fig. 1A-A'', 0 min). Visual inspection did not reveal any significant differences in the dynamics of heart tube formation between females and males (Fig. 1A'', B and Video S1). We used a recurrent neural network architecture, ReSCU-Net (Hawkins et al., 2025), to automatically trace the outline of the heart. We quantified luminal area changes over time (Fig. 1C) and fitted an exponential decay to the luminal area measurements to extract a heart tube closure rate constant (Fig. 1D). We found that the heart tube closed with a rate constant of 1.4±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> (mean±standard deviation, s.d.) in female embryos, similar to the closure rate constant of 1.2±0.1 hr<sup>-1</sup> in male embryos (Fig. 1D). To further determine if there were differences in the morphology of the heart tube as it formed, we quantified the circularity and maximum length of the luminal area along the anterior-posterior and medial-lateral axes of the embryo (Fig. 1E-F). Consistent with our measurements of heart tube closure dynamics, we found no differences in heart tube morphology between female and male embryos. Thus, our results suggest no sexual dimorphism exists in the tissue dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube closure.</p><p><b>&nbsp;</b></p><p>To further determine if there are differences in the cellular behaviours associated with heart tube formation in <i>Drosophila,</i> we measured cardioblast migration dynamics during heart tube development (Fig. 1G-H and Video S2). We imaged heart tube closure in embryos expressing a cardioblast-specific nuclear marker, Mid<sup>E19</sup>:GFP (Jin et al., 2013). We previously showed that nuclear dynamics match cellular dynamics in <i>Drosophila </i>cardioblasts (Balaghi et al., 2023). After imaging, embryos were allowed to develop into larvae and adults, and were sexed based on gonad or body morphology (Hartenstein, 1993). We automatically outlined cell nuclei from confocal microscopy movies using a U-Net, a convolutional neural network architecture (Falk et al., 2019; Balaghi et al., 2023). We found that cardioblasts migrated towards the dorsal midline at a similar speed in both females and males (23.0±6.7 μm/hr <i>vs. </i>22.4±3.3 μm/hr, respectively, Fig. 1I-J). To further establish if the mechanisms of cell movement varied between females and males, we quantified the oscillatory dynamics of cardioblast nuclei. Our results showed that the period of cardioblast oscillation was not significantly different between females and males (1.7±0.8 min <i>vs. </i>1.4±0.8 min, respectively, Fig. 1K). We could not detect any differences in the amplitude of the medial (1.9±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>2.0±0.2 μm for males) or lateral (0.8±0.1 μm for females <i>vs. </i>0.7±0.1 μm for males) steps, with comparable net medial steps of 1.2±0.2 μm in females and<i> </i>1.3±0.2 μm in males (Fig. 1L). Thus, our results indicate that there are no sexual dimorphisms in the dynamics of cardioblast migration during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Altogether, our results suggest that the early stages of heart development in <i>Drosophila </i>do not display sexual dimorphisms, at least not at the level of cellular or tissue dynamics. The oscillatory movement of cardioblasts and the coordination of cardioblast migration is driven by periodic myosin waves and a supracellular F-actin cable (Balaghi et al., 2023). Thus, our results suggest that the cytoskeletal structures associated with heart tube formation will be similar between females and males. This is consistent with evidence from other systems in which actomyosin-based cytoskeletal networks drive collective cell movement. For example, the wound healing response in monolayer epithelia of both female and male origin is associated with a supracellular actomyosin cable that guides and coordinates cell movements (Bement et al., 1993; Marpeaux et al., 2026). Our data support the omission of sex as a biological variable in studies of cellular dynamics during <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation. However, a limitation of our assay is that we did not quantify cell or tissue dynamics in naturally-occurring abnormal hearts (e.g. missing cardioblasts). Further studies measuring the relative incidence of defective heart tubes in females and males, at embryonic, larval, and adult stages, will reveal the extent to which <i>Drosophila </i>can be used to model sexual dimorphisms in CHDs.</p>","references":[{"reference":"<p>Balaghi N, Erdemci-Tandogan G, McFaul C, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2023. Myosin waves and a mechanical asymmetry guide the oscillatory migration of Drosophila cardiac progenitors. Dev Cell 58(14): 1299-1313.e5.</p>","pubmedId":"37295436","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Bement WM, Forscher P, Mooseker MS. 1993. A novel cytoskeletal structure involved in purse string wound closure and cell polarity maintenance.. The Journal of cell biology 121: 565-578.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.121.3.565"},{"reference":"<p>Bodmer R. 1995. Heart development in Drosophila and its relationship to vertebrates. Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine 5: 21-28.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/1050-1738(94)00032-Q"},{"reference":"<p>Bruneau BG. 2008. The developmental genetics of congenital heart disease. Nature 451: 943-948.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nature06801"},{"reference":"<p>Deegan DF, Nigam P, Engel N. 2021. Sexual Dimorphism of the Heart: Genetics, Epigenetics, and Development. Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 8: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3389/fcvm.2021.668252"},{"reference":"<p>Dotson A, Covas T, Halstater B, Ragsdale J. 2024. Congenital Heart Disease. Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice 51: 125-142.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.pop.2023.07.007"},{"reference":"<p>Falk T, Mai D, Bensch R, Çiçek zn, Abdulkadir A, Marrakchi Y, et al., Ronneberger. 2018. U-Net: deep learning for cell counting, detection, and morphometry. Nature Methods 16: 67-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/s41592-018-0261-2"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Balaghi N, Wang K, Hawkins R, Rothenberg K, McFaul C, et al., Castle. 2021. PyJAMAS: open-source, multimodal segmentation and analysis of microscopy images. Bioinformatics 38: 594-596.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/bioinformatics/btab589"},{"reference":"<p>Fernandez-Gonzalez R, Zallen JA. 2013. Wounded cells drive rapid epidermal repair in the early<i>Drosophila</i>embryo. Molecular Biology of the Cell 24: 3227-3237.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1091/mbc.e13-05-0228"},{"reference":"<p>Gittenberger-de Groot AC, Bartelings MM, Deruiter MC, Poelmann RE. 2005. Basics of Cardiac Development for the Understanding of Congenital Heart Malformations. Pediatric Research 57: 169-176.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1203/01.PDR.0000148710.69159.61"},{"reference":"<p>Haack T, Schneider M, Schwendele B, Renault AD. 2014. Drosophila heart cell movement to the midline occurs through both cell autonomous migration and dorsal closure. Developmental Biology 396: 169-182.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.08.033"},{"reference":"<p>Hartenstein V. 1993. Atlas of Drosophila Development. The Development of Drosophila Melanogaster, vol. 3. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. </p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Hawkins R, Balaghi N, Rothenberg KE, Ly M, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2025. ReSCU-Nets: Recurrent U-Nets for segmentation of three-dimensional microscopy data. Journal of Cell Biology 224: 10.1083/jcb.202506102.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1083/jcb.202506102"},{"reference":"<p>Ivanovitch K, Temiño S, Torres M. 2017. Live imaging of heart tube development in mouse reveals alternating phases of cardiac differentiation and morphogenesis. eLife 6: 10.7554/elife.30668.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.7554/eLife.30668"},{"reference":"<p>Jin H, Stojnic R, Adryan B, Ozdemir A, Stathopoulos A, Frasch M. 2013. Genome-Wide Screens for In Vivo Tinman Binding Sites Identify Cardiac Enhancers with Diverse Functional Architectures. PLoS Genetics 9: e1003195.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1371/journal.pgen.1003195"},{"reference":"<p>Kelly RG, Brown NA, Buckingham ME. 2001. The Arterial Pole of the Mouse Heart Forms from Fgf10-Expressing Cells in Pharyngeal Mesoderm. Developmental Cell 1: 435-440.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S1534-5807(01)00040-5"},{"reference":"<p>Marpeaux La, Baudouin C, Alberici Delsin LE, Plutoni Cd, Emery G. 2026. A supracellular actin network transmits forces over long distances at the apical surface of squamous carcinoma cells. Journal of Cell Science 139: 10.1242/jcs.264424.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1242/jcs.264424"},{"reference":"<p>McFaul CMJ, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2017. Shape of my heart: Cell-cell adhesion and cytoskeletal dynamics during Drosophila cardiac morphogenesis. Experimental Cell Research 358: 65-70.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/j.yexcr.2017.03.057"},{"reference":"<p>Mercuro G, Bassareo PP, Mariucci E, Deidda M, Zedda AM, Bonvicini M. 2014. Sex differences in congenital heart defects and genetically induced arrhythmias. Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine 15: 855-863.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.2459/JCM.0b013e32835ec828"},{"reference":"<p>Moorman AFM, Christoffels VM. 2003. Cardiac Chamber Formation: Development, Genes, and Evolution. Physiological Reviews 83: 1223-1267.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1152/physrev.00006.2003"},{"reference":"<p>Öztürk-Çolak A, Marygold SJ, Antonazzo G, Attrill H, Goutte-Gattat D, Jenkins VK, et al., Lovato. 2024. FlyBase: updates to the\n                    <i>Drosophila</i>\n                    genes and genomes database. GENETICS 227: 10.1093/genetics/iyad211.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/genetics/iyad211"},{"reference":"<p>Pugnaloni F, Felici A, Corno AF, Marino B, Versacci P, Putotto C. 2023. Gender differences in congenital heart defects: a narrative review. Translational Pediatrics 12: 1753-1764.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.21037/tp-23-260"},{"reference":"<p>Scepanovic G, Florea A, Fernandez-Gonzalez R. 2020. Multiscale In Vivo Imaging of Collective Cell Migration in Drosophila Embryos. Methods in Molecular Biology,The Epithelial-to Mesenchymal Transition : 199-224.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1007/978-1-0716-0779-4_17"},{"reference":"<p>Schindelin J, Arganda-Carreras I, Frise E, Kaynig V, Longair M, Pietzsch T, et al., Cardona. 2012. Fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis. Nature Methods 9: 676-682.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1038/nmeth.2019"},{"reference":"<p>Sinha T, Li D, Théveniau-Ruissy M, Hutson MR, Kelly RG, Wang J. 2014. Loss of Wnt5a disrupts second heart field cell deployment and may contribute to OFT malformations in DiGeorge syndrome. Human Molecular Genetics 24: 1704-1716.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1093/hmg/ddu584"},{"reference":"<p>Souidi A, Jagla K. 2021. Drosophila Heart as a Model for Cardiac Development and Diseases. Cells 10: 3078.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.3390/cells10113078"},{"reference":"<p>Thomson, J., Graham, P., Schedl, P., &amp; Pulak, R. 2004. Sex-specific GFP-expression in Drosophila embryos and sorting by Copas flow cytometry technique. 45th Annual Drosophila Research Conference, Washington DC (USA).</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":""},{"reference":"<p>Zimmerman MS, Smith AGC, Sable CA, Echko MM, Wilner LB, Olsen HE, et al., Kassebaum. 2020. Global, regional, and national burden of congenital heart disease, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet Child &amp; Adolescent Health 4: 185-200.</p>","pubmedId":"","doi":"10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30402-X"}],"title":"<p>Quantitative image analysis reveals no sexual dimorphism in the cellular dynamics of <i>Drosophila </i>heart tube formation</p>","reviews":[],"curatorReviews":[{"curator":{"displayName":"FlyBase Curators"},"openAcknowledgement":false,"submitted":null}]}]}},"species":{"species":[{"value":"acer saccharum","label":"Acer saccharum","imageSrc":"","imageAlt":"","mod":"TreeGenes","modLink":"https://treegenesdb.org","linkVariable":""},{"value":"achillea millefolium","label":"Achillea millefolium","imageSrc":"","imageAlt":"","mod":"","modLink":"","linkVariable":""},{"value":"acinetobacter baylyi","label":"Acinetobacter baylyi","imageSrc":"","imageAlt":"","mod":"","modLink":"","linkVariable":""},{"value":"actinobacteria bacterium","label":"Actinobacteria bacterium","imageSrc":"","imageAlt":"","mod":"","modLink":"","linkVariable":""},{"value":"adelges 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