Postcoital Finesse

Mating changes female reproductive behavior in profound ways. In Drosophila, the trigger for this behavioral switch is a small peptide called sex peptide (SP), which is transferred with the male seminal fluid during insemination. Two papers in this issue of Neuron (Häsemayer et al. and Yang et al.)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2009-02, Vol.61 (4), p.491-493
Hauptverfasser: Clyne, J. Dylan, Miesenböck, Gero
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Miesenböck, Gero
description Mating changes female reproductive behavior in profound ways. In Drosophila, the trigger for this behavioral switch is a small peptide called sex peptide (SP), which is transferred with the male seminal fluid during insemination. Two papers in this issue of Neuron (Häsemayer et al. and Yang et al.) show that SP inhibits a small set of internal sensory neurons in the female genital tract. These neurons project to the CNS to control the female's reproductive behavior.
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source MEDLINE; Open Access: Cell Press Free Archives; ScienceDirect Freedom Collection (Elsevier); EZB Electronic Journals Library
subjects Animal reproduction
Animals
Behavior
Drosophila - physiology
Drosophila Proteins - genetics
Drosophila Proteins - physiology
Female
Females
Gene expression
Genetic engineering
Genitalia, Female - innervation
Genitalia, Female - physiology
Insemination
Ligands
Male
Neurons
Peptides
Peptides - genetics
Peptides - physiology
Receptors, Peptide
Reproductive system
Sensors
Sensory Receptor Cells - physiology
Sex Differentiation - genetics
Sex Differentiation - physiology
Sexual Behavior, Animal - physiology
title Postcoital Finesse
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