H Matsubayashi

University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki-ken, Japan

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Publications (7)16.95 Total impact

  • Article: Courtship behavior and sexual isolation between Drosophila auraria and D. triauraria in darkness and light
    Y. Oguma, J.-M. Jallon, M. Tomaru, H. Matsubayashi
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    ABSTRACT: Sexual isolation between two species of the Drosophila auraria complex, D. auraria and D. triauraria is different in darkness and light. In darkness there is complete isolation while in light it is only partial. The sensory bases of these differences were investigated by behavioral studies in darkness and light. In darkness there was no normal courtship sequence but males of both species displayed attempted copulation to homospecific and heterospecific females, as well as homospecific males. After a few hours together, homospecific copulations were observed after females displayed a characteristic posture: spreading the wings. Such an acceptance posture, also observed in other Drosophila species, was probably released by the wing vibration of a homospecific male. In light, visual signals alone are able to elicit male's orientation and following, whether flies are housed together or physically separated. Intense homosexual courtships were observed. All these data suggest that males have a low discrimination ability and females play the main role in sexual isolation.
    Journal of Evolutionary Biology 12/2002; 9(6):803 - 815. · 3.28 Impact Factor
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    Article: A locus for female discrimination behavior causing sexual isolation in Drosophila.
    M Doi, M Matsuda, M Tomaru, H Matsubayashi, Y Oguma
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    ABSTRACT: The genetic basis of sexual isolation that contributes to speciation is one of the unsolved questions in evolutionary biology. Drosophila ananassae and Drosophila pallidosa are closely related, and postmating isolation has not developed between them. However, females of both species discriminate their mating partners, and this discrimination contributes to strong sexual isolation between them. By using surgical treatments, we demonstrate that male courtship songs play a dominant role in female mate discrimination. The absence of the song of D. pallidosa dramatically increased interspecies mating with D. ananassae females but reduced intraspecies mating with D. pallidosa females. Furthermore, genetic analysis and chromosomal introgression by repeated backcrosses to D. pallidosa males identified possible loci that control female discrimination in each species. These loci were mapped on distinct positions near the Delta locus on the middle of the left arm of the second chromosome. Because the mate discrimination we studied is well developed and is the only known mechanism that prevents gene flow between them, these loci may have played crucial roles in the evolution of reproductive isolation, and therefore, in the speciation process between these two species.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 07/2001; 98(12):6714-9. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Genetic analysis of Drosophila virilis sex pheromone: genetic mapping of the locus producing Z-(11)-pentacosene.
    M Doi, M Tomaru, H Matsubayashi, K Yamanoi, Y Oguma
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    ABSTRACT: Z-(11)-pentacosene, Drosophila virilis sex pheromone, is predominant among the female cuticular hydrocarbons and can elicit male courtship behaviours. To evaluate the genetic basis of its production, interspecific crosses between D. novamexicana and genetically marked D. virilis were made and hydrocarbon profiles of their backcross progeny were analysed. The production of Z-(11)-pentacosene was autosomally controlled and was recessive. Of the six D. virilis chromosomes only the second and the third chromosomes showed significant contributions to sex pheromone production, and acted additively. Analysis of recombinant females indicated that the locus on the second chromosome mapped to the proximity of position 2-218.
    Genetics Research 09/1996; 68(1):17-21. · 1.71 Impact Factor
  • Article: Reproductive isolation between Drosophila lini and its siblings.
    Y Oguma, S Wen, M Tomaru, H Matsubayashi, T Peng
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    ABSTRACT: Courtship behavior and reproductive isolation between nine strains of Drosophila lini and its siblings from Taiwan (TWN), Dinghushan (DHS) and Nankunshan (NKS) in China, and Pyinoolwin (MMY) and Yangon (RGN) in Myanmar were investigated. No premating and postmating isolation between the Taiwan and mainland China strains were found. Crosses between mainland China (DHS and NKS) or the TWN strain and the MMY or RGN strain produced fertile F1 hybrid females and sterile F1 hybrid males. Crosses between MMY strains and RGN strains which showed strong premating isolation produced either no F1 hybrids, or fertile F1 hybrid females and sterile males in some cases. These results suggest the existence of at least three genetically distinct sibling species of D. lini.
    The Japanese Journal of Genetics 07/1995; 70(3):311-20.
  • Article: P element-induced mutations in Drosophila melanogaster showing high interspecific crossability between D. melanogaster females and D. simulans males.
    Y Oguma, M Sawa, H Matsubayashi, M Nonaka, M Tomaru
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    ABSTRACT: Homozygous stocks for the second or the third chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster with a single insertional plwB element were screened for high crossability with D. simulans. Reciprocal crosses between each of these stocks and D. simulans were made, and the insemination rate at two or three days was examined. From two cycles of screening of the original 575 stocks, one stock (# 687) which showed high insemination rate was selected and was backcrossed to a w strain to substitute the background. We obtained a stock which showed 10% insemination rate with D. simulans males (control was 0%). No stocks exhibiting a high crossability with D. simulans females were acquired. Revertant strains, from which the P element had been lost, were obtained from the backcrossed # 687 stock. The insemination rates of 13 revertants to D. simulans males ranged from 1% to 33%. Seven of these 13 were not significantly different from the control line but were significantly different from the backcrossed # 687 stock. It was concluded that the mutation showing high crossability with D. simulans males was caused by the P element transposition.
    The Japanese Journal of Genetics 05/1995; 70(2):197-209.
  • Article: Epistatic interactions among the P element-induced high interspecific crossability strains in Drosophila melanogaster.
    H Matsubayashi, M Tomaru, M Sawa, M Nonaka, Y Oguma
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    ABSTRACT: Five Drosophila melanogaster strains showing high interspecific crossability with D. simulans males, derived from the previous screening of a set of autosomal plwB transposants, were selected and the effect of the plwB insertion under the same genetic background (white strain) on the interspecific crossability was examined. This phenotype was recessive in the two strains but semidominant in the other three strains. Trans-heterozygotes, however, showed high interspecific crossability compared with the parental homozygotes, suggesting some epistatic interactions between them. In three strains, the effect of the plwB insertion region in different backgrounds (w1118 strain) on the crossability was also tested. Homozygotes of a strain (#687) showed high interspecific crossability comparable to the w background, while homozygotes of both #68 and #783 strains showed lower crossability than w1118. Although #783 heterozygotes showed intermediate values between #783 homozygotes and w1118, #68 heterozygotes showed a significantly higher insemination rate than w1118 and the #68 homozygotes. These results suggest that the region around the plwB insertion sites of #68 and #783 affects the interspecific crossability either positively or negatively depending on the genetic background. In all the stocks, positive correlation between interspecific crossability and the intraspecific mating speed was detected.
    The Japanese Journal of Genetics 05/1995; 70(2):211-21.
  • Article: Excitatory and inhibitory control of mating activity inDrosophila auraria andbiauraria by light
    Naturwissenschaften 01/1995; 82(5):241-242. · 2.28 Impact Factor