Billeter Jean-Christophe, Atallah Jade, Krupp Joshua J, Millar Jocelyn G, Levine Joel D
Department of Biology, University of Toronto at Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga, Ontario L5L 1C6, Canada.
Nature. 2009 Oct 15;461(7266):987-91. doi: 10.1038/nature08495.
Social interactions depend on individuals recognizing each other, and in this context many organisms use chemical signals to indicate species and sex. Cuticular hydrocarbon signals are used by insects, including Drosophila melanogaster, to distinguish conspecific individuals from others. These chemicals also contribute to intraspecific courtship and mating interactions. However, the possibility that sex and species identification are linked by common chemical signalling mechanisms has not been formally tested. Here we provide direct evidence that a single compound is used to communicate female identity among D. melanogaster, and to define a reproductive isolation barrier between D. melanogaster and sibling species. A transgenic manipulation eliminated cuticular hydrocarbons by ablating the oenocytes, specialized cells required for the expression of these chemical signals. The resulting oenocyte-less (oe(-)) females elicited the normal repertoire of courtship behaviours from males, but were actually preferred over wild-type females by courting males. In addition, wild-type males attempted to copulate with oe(-) males. Thus, flies lacking hydrocarbons are a sexual hyperstimulus. Treatment of virgin females with the aversive male pheromone cis-vaccenyl acetate (cVA) significantly delayed mating of oe(-) females compared to wild-type females. This difference was eliminated when oe(-) females were treated with a blend of cVA and the female aphrodisiac (7Z,11Z)-heptacosadiene (7,11-HD), showing that female aphrodisiac compounds can attenuate the effects of male aversive pheromones. 7,11-HD also was shown to have a crucial role in heterospecific encounters. Specifically, the species barrier was lost because males of other Drosophila species courted oe(-) D. melanogaster females, and D. simulans males consistently mated with them. Treatment of oe(-) females with 7,11-HD restored the species barrier, showing that a single compound can confer species identity. These results identify a common mechanism for sexual and species recognition regulated by cuticular hydrocarbons.
社会互动依赖于个体之间的相互识别,在这种情况下,许多生物体利用化学信号来表明物种和性别。包括黑腹果蝇在内的昆虫利用表皮碳氢化合物信号来区分同种个体与其他个体。这些化学物质也有助于种内求偶和交配互动。然而,性别和物种识别是否通过共同的化学信号传导机制联系在一起,这一可能性尚未得到正式验证。在这里,我们提供了直接证据,证明一种单一化合物用于在黑腹果蝇中传达雌性身份,并在黑腹果蝇与其近缘物种之间定义了一个生殖隔离屏障。一种转基因操作通过消融卵圆细胞(表达这些化学信号所需的特殊细胞)消除了表皮碳氢化合物。由此产生的无卵圆细胞(oe(-))雌性引发了雄性正常的求偶行为,但实际上求偶的雄性更喜欢它们而不是野生型雌性。此外,野生型雄性试图与oe(-)雄性交配。因此,缺乏碳氢化合物的果蝇是一种性超刺激物。与野生型雌性相比,用厌恶雄性信息素顺式-醋酸vaccenyl酯(cVA)处理处女雌性显著延迟了oe(-)雌性的交配。当用cVA和雌性性引诱剂(7Z,11Z)-二十七碳二烯(7,11-HD)的混合物处理oe(-)雌性时,这种差异消失了,这表明雌性性引诱剂化合物可以减弱雄性厌恶信息素的作用。7,11-HD在异种相遇中也被证明起着关键作用。具体来说,物种屏障消失了,因为其他果蝇物种的雄性向oe(-)黑腹果蝇雌性求偶,而拟果蝇雄性则持续与它们交配。用7,11-HD处理oe(-)雌性恢复了物种屏障,表明一种单一化合物可以赋予物种身份。这些结果确定了一种由表皮碳氢化合物调节的性别和物种识别的共同机制。