학술논문

desat1 and the Evolution of Pheromonal Communication in Drosophila.
Document Type
Article
Source
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Jul2009, Vol. 1170, p502-505. 4p.
Subject
*PHEROMONES
*GENETICS
*SEX recognition (Zoology)
*SENSORY stimulation
*SMELL
Language
ISSN
0077-8923
Abstract
The evolution of communication is a fundamental biological problem. The genetic control of the signal and its reception must be tightly coadapted, especially in interindividual sexual communication. However, there is very little experimental evidence for tight genetic linkage connecting the emission of a signal and its reception. In Drosophila melanogaster, desat1 is the first known gene that simultaneously affects the emission and the perception of sex pheromones. Our experiments show that both aspects of pheromonal communication (the emission and the perception of sex pheromones) depend on distinct genetic control and may result from tissue-specific expression of different transcripts, all coding for the same desaturase. Therefore, and given the high conservation of its coding region, the pleiotropic activity of the desat1 gene may have arisen from an evolutionary process that shaped its regulatory regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]