Male-Male Courtship Pattern Shaped By Emergence Of A New Gene In Fruit Flies

May 27, 2008 | Source: ScienceDaily.com

When an RNA gene known as sphinx is inactivated in the common fruit fly, it leads to increased male-male courtship, University of Chicago scientists report.

They created flies with a suppressed version of the sphinx gene, which is expressed in male reproductive glands. When the researchers put two males that lacked the sphinx gene together, they noticed that the males were “interested in other males.”