Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, United States.
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Elife. 2021 Apr 12;10:e65760. doi: 10.7554/eLife.65760.
In some mammals and many social insects, highly cooperative societies are characterized by reproductive division of labor, in which breeders and nonbreeders become behaviorally and morphologically distinct. While differences in behavior and growth between breeders and nonbreeders have been extensively described, little is known of their molecular underpinnings. Here, we investigate the consequences of breeding for skeletal morphology and gene regulation in highly cooperative Damaraland mole-rats. By experimentally assigning breeding 'queen' status versus nonbreeder status to age-matched littermates, we confirm that queens experience vertebral growth that likely confers advantages to fecundity. However, they also upregulate bone resorption pathways and show reductions in femoral mass, which predicts increased vulnerability to fracture. Together, our results show that, as in eusocial insects, reproductive division of labor in mole-rats leads to gene regulatory rewiring and extensive morphological plasticity. However, in mole-rats, concentrated reproduction is also accompanied by costs to bone strength.
在一些哺乳动物和许多社会性昆虫中,高度合作的社会以生殖分工为特征,其中繁殖者和非繁殖者在行为和形态上变得明显不同。虽然已经广泛描述了繁殖者和非繁殖者之间的行为和生长差异,但对其分子基础知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了繁殖对高度合作的达马拉兰鼹鼠骨骼形态和基因调控的影响。通过将年龄匹配的同窝幼崽实验分配给繁殖“女王”地位与非繁殖地位,我们证实了女王经历了可能赋予繁殖优势的脊椎生长。然而,她们还上调了骨吸收途径,并表现出股骨质量的减少,这预示着骨折的脆弱性增加。总之,我们的结果表明,与真社会性昆虫一样,鼹鼠的生殖分工导致了基因调控的重布线和广泛的形态可塑性。然而,在鼹鼠中,集中繁殖也伴随着骨骼强度的代价。