von Wyschetzki Katharina, Rueppell Olav, Oettler Jan, Heinze Jürgen
LS Zoologie/Evolutionsbiologie, Universität Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
Mol Biol Evol. 2015 Dec;32(12):3173-85. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msv186. Epub 2015 Sep 3.
Life-history theory predicts a trade-off between reproductive investment and self-maintenance. The negative association between fertility and longevity found throughout multicellular organisms supports this prediction. As an important exception, the reproductives of many eusocial insects (ants, bees, and termites) are simultaneously very long-lived and highly fertile. Here, we examine the proximate basis for this exceptional relationship by comparing whole-body transcriptomes of differently aged queens of the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior. We show that the sets of genes differentially expressed with age significantly overlap with age-related expression changes previously found in female Drosophila melanogaster. We identified several developmental processes, such as the generation of neurons, as common signatures of aging. More generally, however, gene expression in ant queens and flies changes with age mainly in opposite directions. In contrast to flies, reproduction-associated genes were upregulated and genes associated with metabolic processes and muscle contraction were downregulated in old relative to young ant queens. Furthermore, we searched for putative C. obscurior longevity candidates associated with the previously reported lifespan-prolonging effect of mating by comparing the transcriptomes of queens that differed in mating and reproductive status. We found 21 genes, including the putative aging candidate NLaz (an insect homolog of APOD), which were consistently more highly expressed in short-lived, unmated queens than in long-lived, mated queens. Our study provides clear evidence that the alternative regulation of conserved molecular pathways that mediate the interplay among mating, egg laying, and aging underlies the lack of the fecundity/longevity trade-off in ant queens.
生活史理论预测了生殖投资与自我维持之间的权衡。在多细胞生物中发现的生育力与寿命之间的负相关支持了这一预测。作为一个重要的例外,许多群居昆虫(蚂蚁、蜜蜂和白蚁)的繁殖蚁同时寿命很长且繁殖力很高。在这里,我们通过比较不同年龄的暗色心髁蚁蚁后的全身转录组,研究了这种特殊关系的近端基础。我们表明,随年龄差异表达的基因集与先前在黑腹果蝇雌性中发现的与年龄相关的表达变化显著重叠。我们确定了几个发育过程,如神经元的产生,作为衰老的共同特征。然而,更普遍的是,蚁后和果蝇的基因表达随年龄变化主要呈相反方向。与果蝇不同,在年老的蚁后相对于年轻的蚁后中,与繁殖相关的基因上调,而与代谢过程和肌肉收缩相关的基因下调。此外,我们通过比较交配和生殖状态不同的蚁后的转录组,寻找与先前报道的交配延长寿命效应相关的暗色心髁蚁潜在长寿候选基因。我们发现了21个基因,包括潜在的衰老候选基因NLaz(一种与载脂蛋白D同源的昆虫基因),这些基因在短命的未交配蚁后中始终比在长寿的已交配蚁后中表达更高。我们的研究提供了明确的证据,即介导交配、产卵和衰老之间相互作用的保守分子途径的交替调节是蚁后缺乏繁殖力/寿命权衡的基础。