It's a unisex brain with specific signals that trigger 'male' behaviorMay 01, 2008New Haven, Conn. - Research by Yale scientists shows that males and females have essentially unisex brains - at least in flies - according to a recent report in Cell designed to identify factors that are responsible for sex differences in behavior. The researchers showed that a courting "song and dance" routine that only male flies naturally perform - one wing is lifted and wiggled to make a humming "song" - can also be triggered in female flies by artificially stimulating particular brain cells that are present in both sexes. It isn't what you've got - it's how you use it, the authors say. "It appears there is a largely bisexual or 'unisex brain.' Anatomically, the differences are subtle and a few critical switches make the difference between male and female behavior," said senior author Gero Miesenboeck, formerly of Yale University and now at the University of Oxford.
According to the authors, most male animals have to perform elaborate courtship displays to try to convince the female that they are worthy mates. Their study was designed to see what neurons were responsible for behavior in the courtship dance of flies, and how the neural circuits in males and females differed. To do this, they genetically engineered specific neurons in the fly to respond to light. This optical trick allowed them to activate the neural circuits that control the behavior pattern directly. Using a flash of laser light as a "remote control" for the brain cells, the researchers first identified which nerve cells control the courting behavior in males. Next, they showed that the cells were present and functional in both males and females, even though only males do the song and dance. "Surprisingly, when the brain cells of female flies were flashed with the laser cue we found that even the female flies that never normally behaved this way, began to sing," said Dylan Clyne, a Yale post-doctoral associate and primary investigator of the study. "Our work shows that the brains not only look similar but are functionally similar. The females have all the equipment to sing, but normally don't use it because their song circuit doesn't get the appropriate activating signals." Asked about the relevance of this study to humans, Clyne said, "You have to be careful about how much you can extrapolate from studying flies. But, the basic principle should hold up - that is, the idea that we don't need big sex-differences in the brain to explain why it seems that men are from Mars and women from Venus." The authors' next goal is finding the controls that set the flies' brains to the male or female mode. They hope that by studying examples like sex-specific behaviors, they can clarify the still poorly understood relationships between genes, which are the targets of natural selection, and behavior, which is the product of evolution. Ultimately, this line of research could also shed light on how genes underlie behavioral variation and perhaps even specific mental illnesses. Yale University | ||||||||||
|
Related Sex Difference News Articles Study finds that discrimination varies by gender and race Men are more likely to tolerate discrimination than women, however both sexes tend to accept prejudice against poorly educated immigrants and Arab-American airplane travelers, according to a study by the USC-Caltech Center for the Study of Law and Politics. Fungi can tell us about the origin of sex chromosomes Fungi do not have sexes, just so-called mating types. A new study being published today in the prestigious journal PLoS shows that there are great similarities between the parts of DNA that determine the sex of plants and animals and the parts of DNA that determine mating types in certain fungi. Disordered eating less common among teen girls who regularly eat family meals Adolescent girls who frequently eat meals with their families appear less likely to use diet pills, laxatives or other extreme measures to control their weight five years later. Women more depressed and men more impulsive with reduced serotonin functioning Women and men appear to respond differently to the same biochemical manipulation. Major depressive disorder (MDD) is one of the most common mental disorders, and it is also one of the most studied. Influence of sex and handedness on brain is similar in capuchin monkeys and humans Capuchin monkeys are playful, inquisitive primates known for their manual dexterity, complex social behavior, and cognitive abilities. Diabetes Risk Factors Develop Earlier in Women than Men The "diabetes clock" may start ticking in women years in advance of a medical diagnosis of the disease, new research has shown Fatigue in women is reduced in stress-related cortisol study A study of healthy women has harvested results involving fatigue and vigor that eventually may help researchers fine tune efforts to treat a multitude of illnesses and syndromes linked to low levels of the stress hormone cortisol. Evolutionary forces explain why women live longer than men Despite research efforts to find modern factors that would explain the different life expectancies of men and women, the gap is actually ancient and universal. Bigger brain size matters for intellectual ability Brain size matters for intellectual ability and bigger is better, McMaster University researchers have found. Boys cause more problems during labour Women are more likely to encounter complications during labour and delivery when they are having a boy, according to researchers in this week's BMJ. The study took place in the National Maternity Hospital, Dublin using data from the delivery ward database during 1997 to 2000. All mothers who were pregnant for the first time with a singleton birth and who spontaneously went into labour at term were included. In the study period 4,070 male and 4,005 female infants were analysed. Male infants were significantly more likely to require oxytocin (a hormone that stimulates contractions), blood sampling, and instrumental vaginal delivery or caesarean section. There was no significant difference betw More Sex Difference News Articles |
||||||||||
|
||||||||||