نتایج جستجو برای: pheromones

تعداد نتایج: 2656  

Journal: :Current Biology 2015
David W. Rogers Jai A. Denton Ellen McConnell Duncan Greig

Sex with another species can be disastrous, especially for organisms that mate only once, like yeast. Courtship signals, including pheromones, often differ between species and can provide a basis for distinguishing between reproductively compatible and incompatible partners. Remarkably, we show that the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not reject mates engineered to produce pheromone...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Heping Lin Kevin J Mann Elena Starostina Ronald D Kinser Claudio W Pikielny

Odorants and pheromones as well as sweet- and bitter-tasting small molecules are perceived through activation of G protein-coupled chemosensory receptors. In contrast, gustatory detection of salty and sour tastes may involve direct gating of sodium channels of the DEG/ENaC family by sodium and hydrogen ions, respectively. We have found that ppk25, a Drosophila melanogaster gene encoding a DEG/E...

2017
Robin M Hare Sophie Schlatter Gillian Rhodes Leigh W Simmons

Debate continues over the existence of human sex pheromones. Two substances, androstadienone (AND) and estratetraenol (EST), were recently reported to signal male and female gender, respectively, potentially qualifying them as human sex pheromones. If AND and EST truly signal gender, then they should affect reproductively relevant behaviours such as mate perception. To test this hypothesis, het...

2013
J. Verhaeghe R. Gheysen P. Enzlin

Pheromones are substances which are secreted to the outside by an individual and received by a second individual of the same species. Many examples exist in animals but their role in humans remains uncertain since adults have no functioning vomeronasal organ, which processes pheromone signals in animals. Yet pheromones can be detected by the olfactory system although humans under develop and un...

2016
Julien Thibert Jean-Pierre Farine Jérôme Cortot Jean-François Ferveur

Animals ubiquitously use chemical signals to communicate many aspects of their social life. These chemical signals often consist of environmental cues mixed with species-specific signals-pheromones-emitted by conspecifics. During their life, insects can use pheromones to aggregate, disperse, choose a mate, or find the most suitable food source on which to lay eggs. Before pupariation, larvae of...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2006
Zhenshan Wang Carlos Balet Sindreu Vicky Li Aaron Nudelman Guy C-K Chan Daniel R Storm

Terrestrial vertebrates have evolved two anatomically and mechanistically distinct chemosensory structures: the main olfactory epithelium (MOE) and the vomeronasal organ (VNO). Although it has been generally thought that pheromones are detected through the VNO, whereas other chemicals are sensed by the MOE, recent evidence suggests that some pheromones may be detected through the MOE. Odorant r...

2012
Benjamin Houot Stéphane Fraichard Ralph J. Greenspan Jean-François Ferveur

Mate choice is based on the comparison of the sensory quality of potential mating partners, and sex pheromones play an important role in this process. In Drosophila melanogaster, contact pheromones differ between male and female in their content and in their effects on male courtship, both inhibitory and stimulatory. To investigate the genetic basis of sex pheromone discrimination, we experimen...

2013
Arisa Oshimoto Yoshihiro Wakabayashi Anna Garske Roberto Lopez Shane Rolen Michael Flowers Nicole Arevalo Diego Restrepo

Based on pharmacological studies of chemosensory transduction in transient receptor potential channel M5 (TRPM5) knockout mice it was hypothesized that this channel is involved in transduction for a subset of putative pheromones in mouse olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs). Yet, in the same study an electroolfactogram (EOG) in the mouse olfactory epithelium showed no significant difference in the ...

2010
María de la Paz Fernández Yick-Bun Chan Joanne Y. Yew Jean-Christophe Billeter Klaus Dreisewerd Joel D. Levine Edward A. Kravitz

Appropriate displays of aggression rely on the ability to recognize potential competitors. As in most species, Drosophila males fight with other males and do not attack females. In insects, sex recognition is strongly dependent on chemosensory communication, mediated by cuticular hydrocarbons acting as pheromones. While the roles of chemical and other sensory cues in stimulating male to female ...

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