Affiliation:
1. 1 Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Ch-8057 Zurich, Switzerland
2. 2 Department of Biology, University of Szeged, H-6720 Szeged, Hungary
Abstract
Introduction
In this study, we analyzed gynandromorphs with female terminalia, to dissect
mating-related female behaviors in Drosophila.
Materials and methods
We used gynandromorphs, experimentally modified wild-type (Oregon-R) females,
and mutant females that lacked different components of the female reproductive
apparatus.
Results
Many of the gynandromorphs mated but did not expel the mating plug (MP). Some of
these – with thousands of sperm in the uterus – failed to take up sperm into the
storage organs. There were gynandromorphs that stored plenty of sperm but failed to
release them to fertilize eggs. Expelling the MP, sperm uptake into the storage
organs, and the release of stored sperm along egg production are separate steps
occurring during Drosophila female fertility. Cuticle
landmarks of the gynandromorphs revealed that while the nerve foci that control MP
expelling and also those that control sperm uptake reside in the abdominal, the sperm
release foci derive from the thoracic region of the blastoderm.
Discussion and conclusion
The gynandromorph study is confirmed by analyses of (a) mutations that cause
female sterility: Fs(3)Avar (preventing egg deposition),
Tm2gs (removing germline cells),
and iab-4DB (eliminating gonad
formation) and (b) by experimentally manipulated wild-type females: decapitated or cut
through ventral nerve cord.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology