Kamhi J Frances, Sandridge-Gresko Aynsley, Walker Christina, Robson Simon K A, Traniello James F A
Department of Biology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, 02215.
Graduate Program for Neuroscience, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, 02215.
Dev Neurobiol. 2017 Sep;77(9):1072-1085. doi: 10.1002/dneu.22496. Epub 2017 Jun 20.
Brain compartment size allometries may adaptively reflect cognitive needs associated with behavioral development and ecology. Ants provide an informative system to study the relationship of neural architecture and development because worker tasks and sensory inputs may change with age. Additionally, tasks may be divided among morphologically and behaviorally differentiated worker groups (subcastes), reducing repertoire size through specialization and aligning brain structure with task-specific cognitive requirements. We hypothesized that division of labor may decrease developmental neuroplasticity in workers due to the apparently limited behavioral flexibility associated with task specialization. To test this hypothesis, we compared macroscopic and cellular neuroanatomy in two ant sister clades with striking contrasts in worker morphological differentiation and colony-level social organization: Oecophylla smaragdina, a socially complex species with large colonies and behaviorally distinct dimorphic workers, and Formica subsericea, a socially basic species with small colonies containing monomorphic workers. We quantified volumes of functionally distinct brain compartments in newly eclosed and mature workers and measured the effects of visual experience on synaptic complex (microglomeruli) organization in the mushroom bodies-regions of higher-order sensory integration-to determine the extent of experience-dependent neuroplasticity. We demonstrate that, contrary to our hypothesis, O. smaragdina workers have significant age-related volume increases and synaptic reorganization in the mushroom bodies, whereas F. subsericea workers have reduced age-related neuroplasticity. We also found no visual experience-dependent synaptic reorganization in either species. Our findings thus suggest that changes in the mushroom body with age are associated with division of labor, and therefore social complexity, in ants. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 77: 1072-1085, 2017.
脑区室大小异速生长可能会适应性地反映与行为发育和生态学相关的认知需求。蚂蚁提供了一个有助于研究神经结构与发育关系的信息系统,因为工蚁的任务和感觉输入可能会随年龄变化。此外,任务可能在形态和行为上有差异的工蚁群体(亚品级)之间进行划分,通过专业化减少行为指令库的大小,并使脑结构与特定任务的认知需求相匹配。我们假设,由于与任务专业化相关的行为灵活性明显受限,分工可能会降低工蚁的发育神经可塑性。为了验证这一假设,我们比较了两个蚂蚁姐妹分支的宏观和细胞神经解剖结构,它们在工蚁形态分化和蚁群水平的社会组织方面存在显著差异:织叶蚁,一种社会结构复杂、蚁群庞大且工蚁行为上有明显二态性的物种,以及亚丝红蚁,一种社会结构简单、蚁群较小且工蚁形态单一的物种。我们对新羽化和成熟工蚁中功能不同的脑区室体积进行了量化,并测量了视觉经验对蕈形体(高阶感觉整合区域)中突触复合体(微球体)组织的影响,以确定经验依赖性神经可塑性的程度。我们证明,与我们的假设相反,织叶蚁工蚁在蕈形体中有与年龄相关的显著体积增加和突触重组,而亚丝红蚁工蚁与年龄相关的神经可塑性则降低。我们还发现,这两个物种中均不存在视觉经验依赖性的突触重组。因此,我们的研究结果表明,蚂蚁蕈形体随年龄的变化与分工有关,进而与社会复杂性有关。© 2017威利期刊公司。《发育神经生物学》77: 1072 - 1085, 2017。