Kennedy Anissa, Peng Tianfei, Glaser Simone M, Linn Melissa, Foitzik Susanne, Grüter Christoph
Institute of Organismic and Molecular Evolution, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Mainz, Germany.
College of Plant Science, Jilin University, Changchun, China.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Jun;30(11):2676-2688. doi: 10.1111/mec.15893. Epub 2021 May 3.
Communication is essential for social animals, but deciding how to utilize information provided by conspecifics is a complex process that depends on environmental and intrinsic factors. Honey bees use a unique form of communication, the waggle dance, to inform nestmates about the location of food sources. However, as in many other animals, experienced individuals often ignore this social information and prefer to rely on prior experiences, i.e., private information. The neurosensory factors that drive the decision to use social information are not yet understood. Here we test whether the decision to use social dance information or private information is linked to gene expression differences in different parts of the nervous system. We trained bees to collect food from sugar water feeders and observed whether they utilize social or private information when exposed to dances for a new food source. We performed transcriptome analysis of four brain parts (11-16 bees per tissue type) critical for cognition: the subesophageal ganglion, the central brain, the mushroom bodies, and the antennal lobes but, unexpectedly, detected no differences between social or private information users. In contrast, we found 413 differentially expressed genes in the antennae, suggesting that variation in sensory perception mediates the decision to use social information. Social information users were characterized by the upregulation of biogenic amine genes, while private information users upregulated several genes coding for odour perception. These results highlight that decision-making in honey bees might also depend on peripheral processes of perception rather than higher-order brain centres of information integration.
交流对于群居动物至关重要,但决定如何利用同种个体提供的信息是一个复杂的过程,这取决于环境和内在因素。蜜蜂使用一种独特的交流方式——摇摆舞,来告知巢伴食物源的位置。然而,与许多其他动物一样,有经验的个体往往会忽略这种社会信息,而更倾向于依赖先前的经验,即私人信息。驱动使用社会信息这一决策的神经感觉因素尚不清楚。在这里,我们测试使用社会舞蹈信息或私人信息的决策是否与神经系统不同部位的基因表达差异有关。我们训练蜜蜂从糖水喂食器中采集食物,并观察它们在接触新食物源的舞蹈时是利用社会信息还是私人信息。我们对四个对认知至关重要的脑区(每种组织类型11 - 16只蜜蜂)进行了转录组分析:咽下神经节、中枢脑、蘑菇体和触角叶,但出乎意料的是,在使用社会信息或私人信息的蜜蜂之间未检测到差异。相比之下,我们在触角中发现了413个差异表达基因,这表明感觉感知的差异介导了使用社会信息的决策。使用社会信息的蜜蜂的特征是生物胺基因上调,而使用私人信息的蜜蜂上调了几个编码气味感知的基因。这些结果表明,蜜蜂的决策可能也取决于外周感知过程,而不是信息整合的高级脑区。