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Review
. 2021 Sep;35(3):119-131.
doi: 10.1080/01677063.2021.1928113. Epub 2021 Jun 20.

Gaining an understanding of behavioral genetics through studies of foraging in Drosophila and learning in C. elegans

Affiliations
Review

Gaining an understanding of behavioral genetics through studies of foraging in Drosophila and learning in C. elegans

Aaron P Reiss et al. J Neurogenet. 2021 Sep.

Abstract

The pursuit of understanding behavior has led to investigations of how genes, the environment, and the nervous system all work together to produce and influence behavior, giving rise to a field of research known as behavioral neurogenetics. This review focuses on the research journeys of two pioneers of aspects of behavioral neurogenetic research: Dr. Marla Sokolowski and Dr. Catharine Rankin as examples of how different approaches have been used to understand relationships between genes and behavior. Marla Sokolowski's research is centered around the discovery and analysis of foraging, a gene responsible for the natural behavioral polymorphism of Drosophila melanogaster larvae foraging behavior. Catharine Rankin's work began with demonstrating the ability to learn in Caenorhabditis elegans and then setting out to investigate the mechanisms underlying the "simplest" form of learning, habituation. Using these simple invertebrate organisms both investigators were able to perform in-depth dissections of behavior at genetic and molecular levels. By exploring their research and highlighting their findings we present ways their work has furthered our understanding of behavior and contributed to the field of behavioral neurogenetics.

Keywords: C. elegans; Drosophila; behavioral neurogenetics; foraging; learning.

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