4.3 Review

Evolutionary insights into sexual behavior from whiptail lizards

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jez.2467

Keywords

dopamine; evolution; hormones; neuronal nitric oxide synthase; parthenogenesis; social behavior network

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BNS 82-0253, IOS-1845651, IOS-1827333, IOS-1822025]
  2. National Institutes of Health [2 R37 MH41770, DP2HD102042]
  3. Rita Allen Foundation
  4. McKnight Foundation
  5. Pew Charitable Trusts
  6. New York Stem Cell Foundation
  7. Research Scientist Award [2 K05 MH00135]

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Research demonstrates that the brain is bipotential, capable of producing both male-typical and female-typical behavior not predetermined by a fixed program. Studies on whiptail lizards provide unique insights into the evolution of brain-behavior relationships and have transformed our understanding of sexuality.
Is the brain bipotential or is sex-typical behavior determined during development? Thirty years of research in whiptail lizards transformed the field of behavioral neuroscience to show the brain is indeed bipotential, producing behaviors along a spectrum of male-typical and female-typical behavior via a parliamentary system of neural networks and not a predetermined program of constrained behavioral output. The unusual clade of whiptail lizards gave these insights as there are several parthenogenetic all-female species that display both male-typical and female-typical sexual behavior. These descendant species exist alongside their ancestors, allowing a unique perspective into how brain-behavior relationships evolve. In this review, we celebrate the over 40-year career of David Crews, beginning with the story of how he established whiptails as a model system through serendipitous behavioral observations and ending with advice to young scientists formulating their own questions. In between these personal notes, we discuss the discoveries that integrated hormones, neural activity, and gene expression to provide transformative insights into how brains function and reshaped our understanding of sexuality.

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