نتایج جستجو برای: courtship

تعداد نتایج: 2808  

2017
Márcia M. Aranha Dennis Herrmann Hugo Cachitas Ricardo M. Neto-Silva Sophie Dias Maria Luísa Vasconcelos

Courtship behaviours allow animals to interact and display their qualities before committing to reproduction. In fly courtship, the female decides whether or not to mate and is thought to display receptivity by slowing down to accept the male. Very little is known on the neuronal brain circuitry controlling female receptivity. Here we use genetic manipulation and behavioural studies to identify...

Journal: :Neuron 2003
Steven Bray Hubert Amrein

Propagation in higher animals requires the efficient and accurate display of innate mating behaviors. In Drosophila melanogaster, male courtship consists of a stereotypic sequence of behaviors involving multiple sensory modalities, such as vision, audition, and chemosensation. For example, taste bristles located in the male forelegs and the labial palps are thought to recognize nonvolatile pher...

2005
Ebru Demir Barry J. Dickson

All animals exhibit innate behaviors that are specified during their development. Drosophila melanogaster males (but not females) perform an elaborate and innate courtship ritual directed toward females (but not males). Male courtship requires products of the fruitless (fru) gene, which is spliced differently in males and females. We have generated alleles of fru that are constitutively spliced...

2014
Birgit Brüggemeier Stephen Goodwin Mason A. Porter

Males of the species Drosophila melanogaster – the common fruit fly – court their females. During courtship the male extends and vibrates his wing and thereby produces courtship song, which consists of two qualitatively different modes: sine and pulse song. During song, males repeatedly switch between sine and pulse. Recent studies suggest that the male switches not randomly, but chooses whethe...

Journal: :Linear Algebra and its Applications 1995

Journal: :Nature Reviews Genetics 2003

2014
David H. Tran Geoffrey W. Meissner Rachael L. French Bruce S. Baker

We show that a small subset of two to six subesophageal neurons, expressing the male products of the male courtship master regulator gene products fruitless Male (fru M), are required in the early stages of the Drosophila melanogaster male courtship behavioral program. Loss of fru M expression or inhibition of synaptic transmission in these fru M(+) neurons results in delayed courtship initiati...

Journal: :eLife 2015
Eric D Hoopfer Yonil Jung Hidehiko K Inagaki Gerald M Rubin David J Anderson

How brains are hardwired to produce aggressive behavior, and how aggression circuits are related to those that mediate courtship, is not well understood. A large-scale screen for aggression-promoting neurons in Drosophila identified several independent hits that enhanced both inter-male aggression and courtship. Genetic intersections revealed that 8-10 P1 interneurons, previously thought to exc...

2013
Valbona Hoxha Chamala Lama Peter L. Chang Sumit Saurabh Naiya Patel Nicole Olate Brigitte Dauwalder

Soluble circulating proteins play an important role in the regulation of mating behavior in Drosophila melanogaster. However, how these factors signal through the blood-brain barrier (bbb) to interact with the sex-specific brain circuits that control courtship is unknown. Here we show that male identity of the blood-brain barrier is necessary and that male-specific factors in the bbb are physio...

Journal: :Neuron 2015
E. Josephine Clowney Shinya Iguchi Jennifer J. Bussell Elias Scheer Vanessa Ruta

Throughout the animal kingdom, internal states generate long-lasting and self-perpetuating chains of behavior. In Drosophila, males instinctively pursue females with a lengthy and elaborate courtship ritual triggered by activation of sexually dimorphic P1 interneurons. Gustatory pheromones are thought to activate P1 neurons but the circuit mechanisms that dictate their sensory responses to gate...

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