Edward Kravitz

Edward Kravitz, Ph.D.

George Packer Berry Professor of Neurobiology, Emeritus, Harvard Medical School

Behavioral Genetic Studies of Aggression in Drosophila

Aggression is a universal feature of the behavior of social animals. In the wild, it is used for access to food and shelter, for protection from predation and for selection of mates, all of which are essential for survival. Despite its importance, little is known of the neural mechanisms that underlie aggressive behavior, other than that hormonal substances including amines, peptides and steroid hormones serve important roles in the behavior.

Our laboratory examines aggression using common strains of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. Although not widely known, male and female fruit flies fight and males at least become territorial (establish dominance relationships). Learning and memory accompany these fights. With the genome fully sequenced and with elegant methods available for selective manipulation of genes in subsets of central nervous system neurons, behavioral studies of aggression in flies offer a powerful system for identifying fundamental mechanisms underlying this behavior. In initial studies with this system, prior to starting mutant studies, we carried out a quantitative analyses of fighting behavior in male and female flies (see labworks.hms.harvard.edu and PNAS 2002 and 2004). Early studies also identified a single gene, fruitless, that was important in male and female courtship behavior, also was important in differences observed between male and female fighting behavior.  More recently, using genetic methods, we identified single brain serotonin neurons that facilitate going to higher levels of aggression in fights.  Additional genetic tools allow manipulation and visualization of these neurons in behaving animals, and the circuitry involved is currently being worked out.

Publications View
Long-term consequences of agonistic interactions between socially naive juvenile American lobsters (Homarus americanus).
Authors: Authors: Rutishauser RL, Basu AC, Cromarty SI, Kravitz EA.
Biol Bull
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Gender-selective patterns of aggressive behavior in Drosophila melanogaster.
Authors: Authors: Nilsen SP, Chan YB, Huber R, Kravitz EA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Intrathecal opioid treatment for chronic non-malignant pain: a 3-year prospective study.
Authors: Authors: Thimineur MA, Kravitz E, Vodapally MS.
Pain
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Aggression in invertebrates.
Authors: Authors: Kravitz EA, Huber R.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
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Morphology and monoaminergic modulation of Crustacean Hyperglycemic Hormone-like immunoreactive neurons in the lobster nervous system.
Authors: Authors: Basu AC, Kravitz EA.
J Neurocytol
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Fighting fruit flies: a model system for the study of aggression.
Authors: Authors: Chen S, Lee AY, Bowens NM, Huber R, Kravitz EA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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Functional abnormalities of the cervical cord and lower medulla and their effect on pain: observations in chronic pain patients with incidental mild Chiari I malformation and moderate to severe cervical cord compression.
Authors: Authors: Thimineur M, Kitaj M, Kravitz E, Kalizewski T, Sood P.
Clin J Pain
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Agonistic behavior in naïve juvenile lobsters depleted of serotonin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine.
Authors: Authors: Doernberg SB, Cromarty SI, Heinrich R, Beltz BS, Kravitz EA.
J Comp Physiol A
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Serotonin and aggression: insights gained from a lobster model system and speculations on the role of amine neurons in a complex behavior.
Authors: Authors: Kravitz EA.
J Comp Physiol A
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Aminergic neuron systems of lobsters: morphology and electrophysiology of octopamine-containing neurosecretory cells.
Authors: Authors: Heinrich R, Bräunig P, Walter I, Schneider H, Kravitz EA.
J Comp Physiol A
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