AI Article Synopsis

  • Social isolation changes how different species behave, and researchers studied this using vinegar flies.
  • They found that when flies are isolated, they prefer more space and want to be alone, but these feelings go away when they're in a group again after 3 days.
  • The study showed that a chemical called dopamine is important for how male flies react to being alone, while females don't seem to be affected the same way.

Article Abstract

Social isolation causes profound changes in social behaviour in a variety of species. However, the genetic and molecular mechanisms modulating behavioural responses to social isolation and social recovery remain to be elucidated. Here, we quantified the behavioural response of vinegar flies to social isolation using two distinct protocols (social space preference and sociability, the spontaneous tendencies to form groups). We found that social isolation increased social space and reduced sociability. These effects of social isolation were reversible and could be reduced after 3 days of group housing. Flies with a loss of function of (orthologue of autism-related genes) with known increased social space in a socially enriched environment were still able to recover from social isolation. We also show that dopamine (DA) is needed for a response to social isolation and recovery in males but not in females. Furthermore, only in males, DA levels are reduced after isolation and are not recovered after group housing. Finally, in socially enriched flies mutant for , DA levels are reduced in males, but not in females. We propose a model to explain how DA and are involved in the behavioural response to social isolation and its recovery in a dynamic and sex-specific manner.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11288677PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.240604DOI Listing

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