杏吧原创

Dopamine boost restores libido in ageing male fruit flies

Exposing elderly male Drosophila to dopamine increased the time they spent courting females - something that could help us understand sex drive in people
Dopamine boost restores libido in ageing male fruit flies

Wow, this dopamine is good stuff 鈥 (Image: Solvin Zankl/Visuals Unlimited/SPL)

There鈥檚 life in the old boys yet. The waning libido of old male fruit flies has been restored.

Men often lose their sex drive with age 鈥 and so, it seems do . at the National Chi Nan University in Taiwan and his colleagues suspected that low levels of dopamine in the flies were to blame.

Almost 300 neurones in the fruit-fly brain use dopamine. Comparing those linked to sexual function in elderly 40-day-old male flies and sprightly 10-day-old flies, Fu found the older neurones carried 10 times less dopamine. Boosting levels lengthened the time the older flies spent trying to mate.

There are obviously big differences between a man鈥檚 brain and that of a male Drosophila, but Fu says that the new results could provide a useful starting point for in-depth studies that may have clinical implications. For instance, that research might eventually identify ways to fine-tune dopamine levels in humans, perhaps to reverse age-related declines in sexual drive, or even to suppress an overactive libido.

We already have therapies for treating male sexual dysfunction 鈥 notably the drug viagra. But probing the link between dopamine and sexual dysfunction is still important. For instance, dopamine-replacement therapy is one of the most effective treatments for Parkinson鈥檚 disease 鈥 but the .

But at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine in Missouri isn鈥檛 sure we should talk about potential implications for men just yet 鈥 it鈥檚 enough to say that the researchers 鈥渉ave begun to tease out an incredibly complex neural circuit鈥, she says.

Journal reference

Topics: Age / Brains / Parkinson's disease