The foraging gene as a modulator of division of labour in social insects.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Journal of neurogenetics Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Epub Date: 2021-06-20 DOI:10.1080/01677063.2021.1940173
Christophe Lucas, Yehuda Ben-Shahar
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

The social ants, bees, wasps, and termites include some of the most ecologically-successful groups of animal species. Their dominance in most terrestrial environments is attributed to their social lifestyle, which enable their colonies to exploit environmental resources with remarkable efficiency. One key attribute of social insect colonies is the division of labour that emerges among the sterile workers, which represent the majority of colony members. Studies of the mechanisms that drive division of labour systems across diverse social species have provided fundamental insights into the developmental, physiological, molecular, and genomic processes that regulate sociality, and the possible genetic routes that may have led to its evolution from a solitary ancestor. Here we specifically discuss the conserved role of the foraging gene, which encodes a cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG). Originally identified as a behaviourally polymorphic gene that drives alternative foraging strategies in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, changes in foraging expression and kinase activity were later shown to play a key role in the division of labour in diverse social insect species as well. In particular, foraging appears to regulate worker transitions between behavioural tasks and specific behavioural traits associated with morphological castes. Although the specific neuroethological role of foraging in the insect brain remains mostly unknown, studies in genetically tractable insect species indicate that PKG signalling plays a conserved role in the neuronal plasticity of sensory, cognitive and motor functions, which underlie behaviours relevant to division of labour, including appetitive learning, aggression, stress response, phototaxis, and the response to pheromones.

群居昆虫觅食基因在劳动分工中的调节作用。
群居的蚂蚁、蜜蜂、黄蜂和白蚁包括一些在生态上最成功的动物物种。它们在大多数陆地环境中的优势归因于它们的社会生活方式,这使得它们的殖民地能够以惊人的效率开发环境资源。群居昆虫群体的一个关键特征是在不育工蜂中出现的劳动分工,这些工蜂代表了群体中的大多数成员。对不同社会物种之间的劳动分工机制的研究,提供了对调节社会性的发育、生理、分子和基因组过程的基本见解,以及可能导致其从一个孤独的祖先进化而来的遗传途径。在这里,我们特别讨论了觅食基因的保守作用,该基因编码cgmp依赖性蛋白激酶(PKG)。该基因最初被认为是一种行为上的多态基因,它驱动果蝇的觅食策略,后来发现觅食表达和激酶活性的变化在多种群居昆虫物种的劳动分工中也起着关键作用。特别是,觅食似乎调节了工蚁在行为任务和与形态种姓相关的特定行为特征之间的过渡。尽管昆虫大脑中觅食的特定神经行为学作用仍然未知,但对遗传易感昆虫物种的研究表明,PKG信号在感觉、认知和运动功能的神经元可塑性中起保守作用,这些功能是与劳动分工相关的行为的基础,包括食欲学习、攻击、应激反应、趋光性和对信息素的反应。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurogenetics
Journal of neurogenetics 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal is appropriate for papers on behavioral, biochemical, or cellular aspects of neural function, plasticity, aging or disease. In addition to analyses in the traditional genetic-model organisms, C. elegans, Drosophila, mouse and the zebrafish, the Journal encourages submission of neurogenetic investigations performed in organisms not easily amenable to experimental genetics. Such investigations might, for instance, describe behavioral differences deriving from genetic variation within a species, or report human disease studies that provide exceptional insights into biological mechanisms
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