4.8 Article

Shared Song Detector Neurons in Drosophila Male and Female Brains Drive Sex-Specific Behaviors

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 19, Pages 3200-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.08.008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Princeton Sloan-Swartz Center
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [CL 596-1/1]
  3. NIH New Innovator award (DP2)
  4. NIH NINDS BRAIN Initiative [R01 NS104899]
  5. HHMI Faculty Scholar award

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Males and females often produce distinct responses to the same sensory stimuli. How such differences arise-at the level of sensory processing or in the circuits that generate behavior-remains largely unresolved across sensory modalities. We address this issue in the acoustic communication system of Drosophila. During courtship, males generate time-varying songs, and each sex responds with specific behaviors. We characterize male and female behavioral tuning for all aspects of song and show that feature tuning is similar between sexes, suggesting sex-shared song detectors drive divergent behaviors. We then identify higher-order neurons in the Drosophila brain, called pC2, that are tuned for multiple temporal aspects of one mode of the male's song and drive sex-specific behaviors. We thus uncover neurons that are specifically tuned to an acoustic communication signal and that reside at the sensory-motor interface, flexibly linking auditory perception with sex-specific behavioral responses.

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