Department of Anatomy, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.
Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2013 Jun;23(3):330-8. doi: 10.1016/j.conb.2013.04.005. Epub 2013 May 13.
All sexually reproducing animals exhibit gender differences in behavior. Such sexual dimorphisms in behavior are most obvious in stereotyped displays that enhance reproductive success such as mating, aggression, and parental care. Sexually dimorphic behaviors are a consequence of a sexually differentiated nervous system, and recent studies in fruit flies and mice reveal novel insights into the neural mechanisms that control these behaviors. In the main, these include a diverse array of novel sex differences in the nervous system, surprisingly modular control of various stereotyped dimorphic behavioral routines, and unanticipated sensory and central modulation of mating. We start with a brief overview to provide the appropriate conceptual framework so that the advances made by the newer studies discussed subsequently can be fully appreciated. We restrict our review to reporting progress in understanding the basis of mating and aggression in fruit flies and mice.
所有有性生殖的动物在行为上都表现出性别差异。这种行为上的性二态性在增强生殖成功的刻板表现中最为明显,例如交配、攻击和亲代照顾。性二态性行为是性分化神经系统的结果,最近在果蝇和老鼠中的研究揭示了控制这些行为的神经机制的新见解。总的来说,这些包括神经系统中一系列不同的新的性别差异,各种刻板的二态行为程序惊人的模块化控制,以及交配的意外感觉和中枢调节。我们首先简要概述,以提供适当的概念框架,以便充分欣赏随后讨论的较新研究取得的进展。我们的评论仅限于报告在理解果蝇和老鼠交配和攻击基础方面的进展。