Giannoni-Guzmán Manuel A, Avalos Arian, Marrero Perez Jaime, Otero Loperena Eduardo J, Kayım Mehmet, Medina Jose Alejandro, Massey Steve E, Kence Meral, Kence Aykut, Giray Tugrul, Agosto-Rivera José L
Department of Biology, University of Puerto Rico, POB 23360, San Juan 00931, Puerto Rico.
J Exp Biol. 2014 Apr 15;217(Pt 8):1307-15. doi: 10.1242/jeb.096180. Epub 2014 Jan 16.
Circadian rhythms in social insects are highly plastic and are modulated by multiple factors. In addition, complex behaviors such as sun-compass orientation and time learning are clearly regulated by the circadian system in these organisms. Despite these unique features of social insect clocks, the mechanisms as well as the functional and evolutionary relevance of these traits remain largely unknown. Here we show a modification of the Drosophila activity monitoring (DAM) system that allowed us to measure locomotor rhythms of the honey bee, Apis mellifera (three variants; gAHB, carnica and caucasica), and two paper wasps (Polistes crinitus and Mischocyttarus phthisicus). A side-by-side comparison of the endogenous period under constant darkness (free-running period) led us to the realization that these social insects exhibit significant deviations from the Earth's 24 h rotational period as well as a large degree of inter-individual variation compared with Drosophila. Experiments at different temperatures, using honey bees as a model, revealed that testing the endogenous rhythm at 35°C, which is the hive's core temperature, results in average periods closer to 24 h compared with 25°C (23.8 h at 35°C versus 22.7 h at 25°C). This finding suggests that the degree of tuning of circadian temperature compensation varies among different organisms. We expect that the commercial availability, cost-effectiveness and integrated nature of this monitoring system will facilitate the growth of the circadian field in these social insects and catalyze our understanding of the mechanisms as well as the functional and evolutionary relevance of circadian rhythms.
群居昆虫的昼夜节律具有高度可塑性,且受多种因素调节。此外,诸如太阳罗盘定向和时间学习等复杂行为在这些生物体中显然受昼夜节律系统调控。尽管群居昆虫生物钟具有这些独特特征,但这些特性的机制以及功能和进化相关性仍 largely unknown。在此,我们展示了对果蝇活动监测(DAM)系统的一种改进,该改进使我们能够测量蜜蜂(意大利蜜蜂,三个变种;gAHB、卡尼鄂拉蜂和高加索蜂)以及两种胡蜂(多毛胡蜂和米氏胡蜂)的运动节律。在持续黑暗条件下对生物钟周期(自由运行周期)进行的并列比较使我们认识到,与果蝇相比,这些群居昆虫的生物钟周期与地球24小时自转周期存在显著偏差,且个体间差异很大。以蜜蜂为模型在不同温度下进行的实验表明,在蜂巢核心温度35°C下测试生物钟节律,与在25°C下相比,平均周期更接近24小时(35°C时为23.8小时,25°C时为22.7小时)。这一发现表明,昼夜节律温度补偿的调节程度在不同生物体之间存在差异。我们预计,这种监测系统的商业可用性、成本效益和集成性质将促进这些群居昆虫昼夜节律领域的发展,并推动我们对昼夜节律机制以及功能和进化相关性的理解。