iScience (May 2024)

The genetic basis of variation in Drosophila melanogaster mating behavior

  • Akihiko Yamamoto,
  • Wen Huang,
  • Robert R.H. Anholt,
  • Trudy F.C. Mackay

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 5
p. 109837

Abstract

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Summary: Mating behavior is an essential fitness trait. We used the inbred, sequenced lines of the Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP) to gain insights into the evolution of mating success and to evaluate the overlap in genetic architecture of mating behavior between the sexes. We found significant genetic variation for mating success when DGRP males and females from the same line were mated together, and when DGRP males and females were mated to an unrelated strain of the opposite sex. The mating success of DGRP males and females was not correlated when they were paired with the unrelated strain, suggesting independent genetic architecture of mating success in males and females that was confirmed by genome-wide association analyses. However, the mating success between pairs of the same or different DGRP lines was predicted accurately by the respective female and male mating success with the unrelated line.

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