Wallberg Andreas, Pirk Christian W, Allsopp Mike H, Webster Matthew T
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
PLoS Genet. 2016 Jun 9;12(6):e1006097. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006097. eCollection 2016 Jun.
In colonies of the honeybee Apis mellifera, the queen is usually the only reproductive female, which produces new females (queens and workers) by laying fertilized eggs. However, in one subspecies of A. mellifera, known as the Cape bee (A. m. capensis), worker bees reproduce asexually by thelytoky, an abnormal form of meiosis where two daughter nucleii fuse to form single diploid eggs, which develop into females without being fertilized. The Cape bee also exhibits a suite of phenotypes that facilitate social parasitism whereby workers lay such eggs in foreign colonies so their offspring can exploit their resources. The genetic basis of this switch to social parasitism in the Cape bee is unknown. To address this, we compared genome variation in a sample of Cape bees with other African populations. We find genetic divergence between these populations to be very low on average but identify several regions of the genome with extreme differentiation. The regions are strongly enriched for signals of selection in Cape bees, indicating that increased levels of positive selection have produced the unique set of derived phenotypic traits in this subspecies. Genetic variation within these regions allows unambiguous genetic identification of Cape bees and likely underlies the genetic basis of social parasitism. The candidate loci include genes involved in ecdysteroid signaling and juvenile hormone and dopamine biosynthesis, which may regulate worker ovary activation and others whose products localize at the centrosome and are implicated in chromosomal segregation during meiosis. Functional analysis of these loci will yield insights into the processes of reproduction and chemical signaling in both parasitic and non-parasitic populations and advance understanding of the process of normal and atypical meiosis.
在蜜蜂(西方蜜蜂)群体中,蜂后通常是唯一具有繁殖能力的雌性,它通过产受精卵来产生新的雌性个体(蜂后和工蜂)。然而,在西方蜜蜂的一个亚种——海角蜜蜂(海角西方蜜蜂)中,工蜂通过产雌孤雌生殖进行无性繁殖,这是一种异常的减数分裂形式,即两个子细胞核融合形成单个二倍体卵,这些卵无需受精就能发育成雌性个体。海角蜜蜂还表现出一系列有助于社会寄生的表型,即工蜂将此类卵产在其他蜂群中,以便其后代能够利用这些蜂群的资源。海角蜜蜂这种向社会寄生转变的遗传基础尚不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们比较了海角蜜蜂样本与其他非洲种群的基因组变异情况。我们发现这些种群之间的遗传差异平均非常低,但识别出了基因组中的几个极端分化区域。这些区域在海角蜜蜂中强烈富集选择信号,表明正选择水平的提高产生了该亚种独特的一组衍生表型特征。这些区域内的遗传变异使得能够明确地从基因上鉴定海角蜜蜂,并且可能是社会寄生遗传基础的所在。候选基因座包括参与蜕皮甾类信号传导、保幼激素和多巴胺生物合成的基因,这些基因可能调节工蜂卵巢的激活,还有其他一些基因,其产物定位于中心体,并与减数分裂过程中的染色体分离有关。对这些基因座的功能分析将深入了解寄生和非寄生种群中的繁殖过程和化学信号传导,并推动对正常和非典型减数分裂过程的理解。