Dopamine Sets the Pace of Stress-Driven Courtship Suppression in Flies

1 min read
Source: Neuroscience News
Dopamine Sets the Pace of Stress-Driven Courtship Suppression in Flies
Photo: Neuroscience News
TL;DR Summary

In fruit flies, researchers show that dopamine does not trigger the initial shutdown of mating drive under stress but acts as a molecular timer that sustains suppression after stress; longer confinement leads to longer-lasting courtship inhibition via dopamine signaling in the mushroom body, offering insights into stress-related sexual dysfunction that may extend to humans.

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