Whitfield Charles W, Ben-Shahar Yehuda, Brillet Charles, Leoncini Isabelle, Crauser Didier, Leconte Yves, Rodriguez-Zas Sandra, Robinson Gene E
Department of Entomology, Neuroscience Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 505 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Oct 31;103(44):16068-75. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0606909103. Epub 2006 Oct 25.
Honey bees undergo an age-related, socially regulated transition from working in the hive to foraging that has been previously associated with changes in the expression of thousands of genes in the brain. To understand the meaning of these changes, we conducted microarray analyses to examine the following: (i) the ontogeny of gene expression preceding the onset of foraging, (ii) the effects of physiological and genetic factors that influence this behavioral transition, and (iii) the effects of foraging experience. Although >85% of approximately 5,500 genes showed brain differences, principal component analysis revealed discrete influences of age, behavior, genotype, environment, and experience. Young bees not yet competent to forage showed extensive, age-related expression changes, essentially complete by 8 days of age, coinciding with previously described structural brain changes. Subsequent changes were not age-related but were largely related to effects of juvenile hormone (JH), suggesting that the increase in JH that influences the hive bee-forager transition may cause many of these changes. Other treatments that also influence the onset age of foraging induced many changes but with little overlap, suggesting that multiple pathways affect behavioral maturation. Subspecies differences in onset age of foraging were correlated with differences in JH and JH-target gene expression, suggesting that this endocrine system mediates the genetic differences. We also used this multifactorial approach to identify candidate genes for behavioral maturation. This successful dissection of gene expression indicates that, for social behavior, gene expression in the brain can provide a robust indicator of the interaction between hereditary and environmental information.
蜜蜂会经历一种与年龄相关、受社会调节的从蜂巢内工作到外出觅食的转变,此前这种转变被认为与大脑中数千个基因表达的变化有关。为了理解这些变化的意义,我们进行了微阵列分析,以研究以下内容:(i)觅食开始前基因表达的个体发育;(ii)影响这种行为转变的生理和遗传因素的作用;(iii)觅食经验的作用。尽管在大约5500个基因中,超过85%的基因在大脑中表现出差异,但主成分分析揭示了年龄、行为、基因型、环境和经验的离散影响。尚未具备觅食能力的幼蜂表现出广泛的、与年龄相关的表达变化,在8日龄时基本完成,这与之前描述的大脑结构变化相吻合。随后的变化与年龄无关,主要与保幼激素(JH)的作用有关,这表明影响蜂巢蜜蜂向觅食者转变的JH增加可能导致了许多这些变化。其他也影响觅食开始年龄的处理诱导了许多变化,但几乎没有重叠,这表明多种途径影响行为成熟。觅食开始年龄的亚种差异与JH及JH靶基因表达的差异相关,这表明该内分泌系统介导了遗传差异。我们还使用这种多因素方法来识别行为成熟的候选基因。这种对基因表达的成功剖析表明,对于社会行为,大脑中的基因表达可以为遗传信息和环境信息之间的相互作用提供一个有力的指标。