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Friday, August 15, 2008 - 7:36 PM
Louis J. Sheehan. Some fish really know how to swim to the top. Researchers have found
that within minutes of recognizing a social void, a lowly cichlid can
alter its looks and behavior to ascend to the dominant spot in its
group. Moreover, the same researchers have identified the gene that is
primarily responsible for the fish's changing physiology. http://louis2j1sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
"We had
known that social environment controls the reproduction of [cichlids],"
says Sabrina Burmeister of the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Other researchers had shown, for example, that a subordinate
male, normally sterile, can gain the ability to reproduce within a week
of the removal of the dominant male. In the November PLoS Biology, Burmeister shows that the color and behavior of an upwardly mobile fish can change within minutes, reflecting his new status. Dominant,
fertile male cichlids have vibrant yellow as well as blue coloring.
Their flashy scales attract females, but they also draw the attention
of predators. So, when a predator picks off a dominant fish, one of the
less colorful, less aggressive, and infertile subordinate cichlids will
undergo physiological changes to take the leader's place. Burmeister
and her colleagues simulated this situation by establishing tanks with
one dominant male, one subordinate male, and numerous females. Cichlids
are sensitive to changes in their surroundings, so "we went through
some pretty big hoops to make sure the fish were in a comfortable
environment," she notes. Then, the scientists changed things. The
researchers donned night-vision goggles to remove, in darkness, the
dominant fish from each tank. An hour later, the team turned on the
lights and watched as the once-subordinate male in each tank assessed
its new situation. Within 2 minutes, he would begin to acquire
brilliant colors and for the first time show interest in the females. To
determine the brain biochemistry that initiated these physiological and
behavioral changes, the researchers examined neural tissue from the
preoptic area of fish in various states of dominance and subordination.
This brain region is known to regulate reproductive behavior in
vertebrates, including people. Burmeister explains that her team
searched for active genes known to trigger a cascade of other gene
activation. In the brains of fish that ascended to dominance, the
researchers found larger numbers of activated egr-1 genes
than they did in the brains of subordinate or dominant cichlids not
undergoing a status change. The researchers speculate that egr-1 turns on the gene for gonadotropin-releasing hormone 1, which is essential for vertebrate reproduction. http://louis2j1sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
Gregory
Ball of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore comments that the North
Carolina team's finding is significant because it shows a complex
social situation quickly triggering gene activity that controls
reproduction. Because the genes involved in the cichlid change
are found in all vertebrates, Ball says, "it is quite reasonable to
speculate that other species, including humans," could exhibit such
gene expression during social interactions.
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