Janelia Research Campus, HHMI, Ashburn, VA 20147, USA
Janelia Research Campus, HHMI, Ashburn, VA 20147, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2020 Dec 23;223(Pt 24):jeb232439. doi: 10.1242/jeb.232439.
Social interactions pivot on an animal's experiences, internal states and feedback from others. This complexity drives the need for precise descriptions of behavior to dissect the fine detail of its genetic and neural circuit bases. In laboratory assays, male reliably exhibit aggression, and its extent is generally measured by scoring lunges, a feature of aggression in which one male quickly thrusts onto his opponent. Here, we introduce an explicit approach to identify both the onset and reversals in hierarchical status between opponents and observe that distinct aggressive acts reproducibly precede, concur or follow the establishment of dominance. We find that lunges are insufficient for establishing dominance. Rather, lunges appear to reflect the dominant state of a male and help in maintaining his social status. Lastly, we characterize the recurring and escalating structure of aggression that emerges through subsequent reversals in dominance. Collectively, this work provides a framework for studying the complexity of agonistic interactions in male flies, enabling its neurogenetic basis to be understood with precision.
社会互动以动物的经验、内部状态和来自他人的反馈为中心。这种复杂性要求对行为进行精确的描述,以剖析其遗传和神经回路基础的细微差别。在实验室试验中,雄性通常表现出攻击性,其程度通常通过评分来衡量,其中一种是雄性快速地冲向对手。在这里,我们引入了一种明确的方法来识别对手之间的等级关系的开始和逆转,并观察到不同的攻击行为可重复性地先于、同时或紧随优势地位的确立。我们发现,冲刺不足以确立优势地位。相反,冲刺似乎反映了雄性的主导状态,并有助于维持他的社会地位。最后,我们描述了通过随后的优势地位逆转而出现的攻击性的反复和升级结构。总的来说,这项工作为研究雄性果蝇竞争互动的复杂性提供了一个框架,使我们能够精确地理解其神经遗传基础。