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Fruit Flies, Gene Shift Tilts Sex Orientation
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
International
Herald Tribune When the genetically altered fruit fly was
released into the observation chamber, it did what these
breeders par excellence tend to do. It pursued a waiting
virgin female. It gently tapped the girl with its leg, played
her a song (using wings as instruments) and, only then,
dared to lick her - all part of standard fruit fly seduction.
The
observing scientist looked with disbelief at the show, for
the suitor in this case was not a male, but a female that
researchers had artificially endowed with a single male-type
gene.
That
one gene, the researchers are announcing today in the journal
Cell, is apparently by itself enough to create patterns
of sexual behavior - a kind of master sexual gene that normally
exists in two distinct male and female variants.
In
a series of experiments, the researchers found that females
given the male variant of the gene acted exactly like males
in courtship, madly pursuing other females. Males that were
artificially given the female version of the gene became
more passive and turned their sexual attention to other
males.
"We
have shown that a single gene in the fruit fly is sufficient
to determine all aspects of the flies' sexual orientation
and behavior," said the paper's lead author, Dr. Barry Dickson,
senior scientist at the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology
at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna. "It's very
surprising.
"What
it tells us is that instinctive behaviors can be specified
by genetic programs, just like the morphologic development
of an organ or a nose."
The
results are certain to prove influential in debates about
whether genes or environment determine who we are, how we
act and, especially, our sexual orientation, although it
is not clear now if there is a similar master sexual gene
for humans.
Still,
experts said they were both awed and shocked by the findings.
"The results are so clean and compelling, the whole field
of the genetic roots of behavior is moved forward tremendously
by this work," said Dr. Michael Weiss, chairman of the department
of biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University. "Hopefully
this will take the discussion about sexual preferences out
of the realm of morality and put it in the realm of science."
He
added: "I never chose to be heterosexual; it just happened.
But humans are complicated. With the flies we can see in
a simple and elegant way how a gene can influence and determine
behavior."
The
finding supports scientific evidence accumulating over the
past decade that sexual orientation may be innately programmed
into the brains of men and women. Equally intriguing, the
researchers say, is the possibility that a number of behaviors
- hitting back when feeling threatened, fleeing when scared
or laughing when amused - may also be programmed into human
brains, a product of genetic heritage.
"This
is a first - a superb demonstration that a single gene can
serve as a switch for complex behaviors," said Dr. Gero
Miesenboeck, a professor of cell biology at Yale.
Dr.
Dickson, the lead author, said he ran into the laboratory
when an assistant called him on a Sunday night with the
results. "This really makes you think about how much of
our behavior, perhaps especially sexual behaviors, has a
strong genetic component," he said.
All
the researchers cautioned that any of these wired behaviors
set by master genes will probably be modified by experience.
Though male fruit flies are programmed to pursue females,
Dr. Dickson said, those that are frequently rejected over
time become less aggressive in their mating behavior.
When
a normal male fruit fly is introduced to a virgin female,
they almost immediately begin foreplay and then copulate
for 20 minutes. In fact, Dr. Dickson and his co-author,
Dr. Ebru Demir of the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology,
specifically chose to look for the genetic basis of fly
sexual behavior precisely because it seemed so strong and
instinctive and, therefore, predictable.
Scientists
have known for several years that the master sexual gene,
known as fru, was central to mating, coordinating a network
of neurons that were involved in the male fly's courtship
ritual. Last year, Dr. Bruce Baker of Stanford University
discovered that the mating circuit controlled by the gene
involved 60 nerve cells and that if any of these were damaged
or destroyed by the scientists, the animal could not mate
properly. Both male and female flies have the same genetic
material as well as the neural circuitry required for the
mating ritual, but different parts of the genes are turned
on in the two sexes. But no one dreamed that simply activating
the normally dormant male portion of the gene in a female
fly could cause a genetic female to display the whole elaborate
panoply of male fruit fly foreplay.
©
2005 The New York Times Company
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