TY - JOUR
T1 - Female Contact Activates Male-Specific Interneurons that Trigger Stereotypic Courtship Behavior in Drosophila
AU - Kohatsu, Soh
AU - Koganezawa, Masayuki
AU - Yamamoto, Daisuke
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank P. Garrity and T. Kitamoto for fly stocks, A. Ejima for supplying cVA, and K. Sawaguchi for secretarial assistance. This work was supported by MEXT grants 1802012 to D.Y. and 21770074 to M.K., a grant from the Strategic Japanese-French Cooperative Program funded by JST to D.Y., and a grant from the Tohoku Neuroscience GCOE program.
PY - 2011/2/10
Y1 - 2011/2/10
N2 - We determined the cellular substrate for male courtship behavior by quasinatural and artificial stimulation of brain neurons. Activation of fruitless (fru)-expressing neurons via stimulation of thermosensitive dTrpA1 channels induced an entire series of courtship acts in male Drosophila placed alone without any courting target. By reducing the number of neurons expressing dTrpA1 by MARCM, we demonstrated that the initiation of courtship behavior is significantly correlated with the activation of the transmidline P1 interneurons, the descending P2b interneurons, or both, indicating that these interneurons trigger courtship. Using an experimental paradigm in which a tethered male can be stimulated to initiate courtship by touching his foreleg tarsus to a female's abdomen, we found that P1 neurites of tethered males showed a transient Ca2+ rise after tarsal stimulation with the female-associated sensory cues. These observations strongly suggest that P1 neurons are the prime components of the neural circuitry that initiates male courtship.
AB - We determined the cellular substrate for male courtship behavior by quasinatural and artificial stimulation of brain neurons. Activation of fruitless (fru)-expressing neurons via stimulation of thermosensitive dTrpA1 channels induced an entire series of courtship acts in male Drosophila placed alone without any courting target. By reducing the number of neurons expressing dTrpA1 by MARCM, we demonstrated that the initiation of courtship behavior is significantly correlated with the activation of the transmidline P1 interneurons, the descending P2b interneurons, or both, indicating that these interneurons trigger courtship. Using an experimental paradigm in which a tethered male can be stimulated to initiate courtship by touching his foreleg tarsus to a female's abdomen, we found that P1 neurites of tethered males showed a transient Ca2+ rise after tarsal stimulation with the female-associated sensory cues. These observations strongly suggest that P1 neurons are the prime components of the neural circuitry that initiates male courtship.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuron.2010.12.017
DO - 10.1016/j.neuron.2010.12.017
M3 - Article
C2 - 21315260
AN - SCOPUS:79551670798
SN - 0896-6273
VL - 69
SP - 498
EP - 508
JO - Neuron
JF - Neuron
IS - 3
ER -