Fruit Flies Boost STI Immunity Before Sex

Monday, November 4, 2013 - 18:00 in Biology & Nature

Drosophila Bbski Among the promiscuous common fruit fly, sexually-transmitted infections run rampant. Female fruit flies, however, have a special kind of defense to lower the potential cost of getting down and dirty with another fly, according to a new study from the University of Bath in the UK. When they get in the mood, female flies can ramp up their immune defenses against fungal STIs, in what's called immune anticipation. According to the study, female fruit flies regulate certain immune and stress response genes when they hear the courtship song of a male. This helps them fight off sexually-transmitted infection from the fungus Metarhizium robertsii. One of these genes, Turandot M (TotM), specifically protected the flies against STIs. When the flies were exposed to a topical infection of the same fungus, the expression of TotM didn't help...

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