The neural pathway that control the perception of a taste pheromone has been genetically labelled with a fluorescent protein.
Credit: Meredith Calvert and Kah Junn Tan
New research, published today in eLife, identified the neural circuit in the brain of the fruitfly (Drosophila melanogaster) that is responsible for detecting a taste pheromone, which controls the decision of male flies to mate with females.
In the natural world, sense of taste controls many behavioral
decisions. For many animals, pheromones, which are chemical signals used
for communication, influence the choice to mate. However, very little
is known about how taste pheromones are processed in the brain.
The recent work by Joanne Yew, assistant researcher at the Pacific
Biosciences Research Center (PBRC), a newly integrated research unit of
the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) at the
University of Hawai'i - Mānoa, and colleagues explicitly tracked this
process - identifying the taste cells on the fruitfly's legs which
detect the pheromone, locating the neurons in the brain which respond to
the pheromone, and mapping the connection between the two populations
of cells.
The pheromone, named CH503, is produced by males, passed to females
during mating, and stops other males from mating with the female - it is
an anti-aphrodisiac for other males.
Many taste cells are found on the forelegs of flies, so Yew and
colleagues used genetic manipulation to turn off activity in individual
classes of these taste cells. They then tested whether males could still
respond to the pheromone. Using this strategy, they were able to
identify one class of taste receptors, called Gr68a, that is responsible
for detecting the pheromone.
"Normally, males are repulsed by females that have been perfumed with
the pheromone. However, when activity in Gr68a neurons is turned off,
males will actively try to mate with females perfumed with the
pheromone," said Yew.
Next, the researchers turned off activity in different groups of
cells in the central brain to determine whether males could still
respond to the pheromone. One group of cells which produces the chemical
Tachykinin appeared to be essential for detecting the pheromone.
Finally, the scientists established that the Gr68a neurons in the leg
connect with the Tachykinin neurons in the brain. To do this, they
introduced 2 sensors into the Gr68a and Tachykinin neuron populations.
The sensors light up when neurons in the region are close enough to form
connections. The researchers were able to detect connectivity between
the two populations of neurons.
"This work identifies a molecular signal, Tachykinin, that controls
the perception of taste pheromones and provides an anatomical map of
where this information is processed in the brain," said Yew. "By
understanding the cellular basis of how taste information is encoded, we
will be able to study how sensory signals shape programmed behaviors
and influence complex social decisions such as the choice to mate.
Potentially, we could devise a way to manipulate Tachykinin in pest
populations to control reproduction."
In the future, Yew and colleagues intend to further map the
connections of Tachykinin neurons and examine how physiological state
(e.g., hunger, stress) can influence the choice to mate via the
Tachykinin pathway.
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