Department of Entomology, Center for Pollinator Research, Center for Chemical Ecology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2014 Mar 11;14(1):45. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-14-45.
The genetic and physiological pathways regulating behavior in solitary species are hypothesized to have been co-opted to regulate social behavior in social species. One classic example is the interaction between vitellogenin (an egg-yolk and storage protein) and juvenile hormone, which are positively correlated in most insect species but have modified interactions in highly eusocial insects. In some of these species (including some termites, ants, and the honey bee), juvenile hormone and vitellogenin levels are negatively correlated and juvenile hormone has shifted its role from a gonadotropin to a regulator of maturation and division of labor in the primarily sterile workers. The function of vitellogenin also seems to have broadened to encompass similar roles. Thus, the functions and molecular interactions of juvenile hormone and vitellogenin are hypothesized to have undergone changes during the evolution of eusociality, but the mechanisms underlying these changes are unknown.Bumble bees offer an excellent model system for testing how the relationship between juvenile hormone and vitellogenin evolved from solitary to social species. Bumble bee colonies are primitively eusocial and comprised of a single reproductive queen and facultatively sterile workers. In Bombus terrestris, juvenile hormone retains its ancestral role as a gonadotropin and is also hypothesized to regulate aggressive behavior. However, the function of vitellogenin and its interactions with juvenile hormone have not yet been characterized.
By characterizing vitellogenin RNA expression levels (vg) in B. terrestris we show that vg is not associated with task and only partially associated with worker age, queen presence, and caste (queen vs worker). The correlations of vg with ovarian activation were not consistent across experiments, but both vg and ovarian activation were significantly associated with levels of aggression experienced by workers. Treatment with juvenile hormone did not affect vg levels in queenless groups.
We suggest that social interactions affect vg levels more strongly than a worker's reproductive physiological state, and that juvenile hormone and vg are uncoupled in this species. Thus, although juvenile hormone maintains its traditional role as gonadotropin in B. terrestris, vg has already been co-opted into a novel role, consistent with the model that Bombus represents an intermediate stage in the evolution of eusociality.
调节独居物种行为的遗传和生理途径被假设被用来调节群居物种的社会行为。一个经典的例子是卵黄蛋白原(一种蛋黄和储存蛋白)和保幼激素之间的相互作用,在大多数昆虫物种中,这两者呈正相关,但在高度群居的昆虫中,其相互作用发生了改变。在这些物种中的一些(包括一些白蚁、蚂蚁和蜜蜂)中,保幼激素和卵黄蛋白原的水平呈负相关,并且保幼激素已经从一种促性腺激素转变为主要不育工蜂成熟和劳动分工的调节剂。卵黄蛋白原的功能似乎也已经扩大到包含类似的作用。因此,保幼激素和卵黄蛋白原的功能和分子相互作用被假设在群居性进化过程中发生了变化,但这些变化的机制尚不清楚。大黄蜂为测试保幼激素和卵黄蛋白原之间的关系如何从独居物种进化到群居物种提供了一个极好的模型系统。大黄蜂的群体是原始群居的,由一个单一的生殖女王和可选择的不育工蜂组成。在欧洲熊蜂中,保幼激素保留了其作为促性腺激素的古老作用,并且还被假设调节攻击性行为。然而,卵黄蛋白原的功能及其与保幼激素的相互作用尚未得到描述。
通过在欧洲熊蜂中描述卵黄蛋白原 RNA 表达水平(vg),我们表明 vg 与任务无关,仅与工蜂年龄、女王存在和蜂群(女王与工蜂)部分相关。vg 与卵巢激活的相关性在实验中并不一致,但 vg 和卵巢激活都与工蜂经历的攻击性水平显著相关。在无女王群体中,保幼激素处理不会影响 vg 水平。
我们认为,社会互动比工蜂的生殖生理状态更强烈地影响 vg 水平,并且在这种物种中,保幼激素和 vg 是分离的。因此,尽管保幼激素在欧洲熊蜂中保持了其作为促性腺激素的传统作用,但 vg 已经被重新用于一个新的角色,这与熊蜂代表群居性进化中间阶段的模型一致。