What does the fruitless gene tell us about nature vs. nurture in the sex life of Drosophila?

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Abstract

The fruitless (fru) gene in Drosophila has been proposed to play a master regulator role in the formation of neural circuitries for male courtship behavior, which is typically considered to be an innate behavior composed of a fixed action pattern as generated by the central pattern generator. However, recent studies have shed light on experience-dependent changes and sensory-input-guided plasticity in courtship behavior. For example, enhanced male-male courtship, a fru mutant “hallmark,” disappears when fru-mutant males are raised in isolation. The fact that neural fru expression is induced by neural activities in the adult invites the supposition that Fru as a chromatin regulator mediates experience-dependent epigenetic modification, which underlies the neural and behavioral plasticity.

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Yamamoto, D., & Kohatsu, S. (2017, April 3). What does the fruitless gene tell us about nature vs. nurture in the sex life of Drosophila? Fly. Taylor and Francis Inc. https://doi.org/10.1080/19336934.2016.1263778

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