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Reproductive workers show queenlike gene expression in an intermediately eusocial insect, the buff-tailed bumble bee Bombus terrestris

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posted on 2015-06-16, 13:59 authored by Mark C. Harrison, Robert L. Hammond, Eamonn B. Mallon
Bumble bees represent a taxon with an intermediate level of eusociality within Hymenoptera. The clear division of reproduction between a single founding queen and the largely sterile workers is characteristic for highly eusocial species, whereas the morphological similarity between the bumble bee queen and the workers is typical for more primitively eusocial hymenopterans. Also, unlike other highly eusocial hymenopterans, division of labour among worker subcastes is plastic and not predetermined by morphology or age. We conducted a differential expression analysis based on RNA-seq data from 11 combinations of developmental stage and caste to investigate how a single genome can produce the distinct castes of queens, workers and males in the buff-tailed bumble bee Bombus terrestris. Based on expression patterns, we found males to be the most distinct of all adult castes (2411 transcripts differentially expressed compared to nonreproductive workers). However, only relatively few transcripts were differentially expressed between males and workers during development (larvae: 71 and pupae: 162). This indicates the need for more distinct expression patterns to control behaviour and physiology in adults compared to those required to create different morphologies. Among female castes, reproductive workers and their nonreproductive sisters displayed differential expression in over ten times more transcripts compared to the differential expression found between reproductive workers and their mother queen. This suggests a strong shift towards a more queenlike behaviour and physiology when a worker becomes fertile. This contrasts with eusocial species where reproductive workers are more similar to nonreproductive workers than the queen.

Funding

This study was funded by a NERC Biomolecular Analysis Facility research grant (NBAF 829). Illumina library preparation, sequencing and bioinformatics were carried out by Edinburgh Genomics, The University of Edinburgh. Edinburgh Genomics is partly supported through core grants from NERC (R8/H10/56), MRC (MR/K001744/1) and BBSRC (BB/J004243/1). M.C.H. is funded by a NERC PhD research grant

History

Citation

Molecular Ecology, 24 (12), pp. 3043-3063

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Biological Sciences/Department of Biology

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Molecular Ecology

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0962-1083

eissn

1365-294X

Copyright date

3043

Available date

2016-05-26

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mec.13215/abstract

Notes

Supporting information may be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mec.13215/suppinfo

Language

en

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