Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Metabolomics and Proteomics Platform, Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Elife. 2021 Nov 2;10:e74005. doi: 10.7554/eLife.74005.
In cooperative systems exhibiting division of labor, such as microbial communities, multicellular organisms, and social insect colonies, individual units share costs and benefits through both task specialization and exchanged materials. Socially exchanged fluids, like seminal fluid and milk, allow individuals to molecularly influence conspecifics. Many social insects have a social circulatory system, where food and endogenously produced molecules are transferred mouth-to-mouth (stomodeal trophallaxis), connecting all the individuals in the society. To understand how these endogenous molecules relate to colony life, we used quantitative proteomics to investigate the trophallactic fluid within colonies of the carpenter ant . We show that different stages of the colony life cycle circulate different types of proteins: young colonies prioritize direct carbohydrate processing; mature colonies prioritize accumulation and transmission of stored resources. Further, colonies circulate proteins implicated in oxidative stress, ageing, and social insect caste determination, potentially acting as superorganismal hormones. Brood-caring individuals that are also closer to the queen in the social network (nurses) showed higher abundance of oxidative stress-related proteins. Thus, trophallaxis behavior could provide a mechanism for distributed metabolism in social insect societies. The ability to thoroughly analyze the materials exchanged between cooperative units makes social insect colonies useful models to understand the evolution and consequences of metabolic division of labor at other scales.
在表现出分工的合作系统中,如微生物群落、多细胞生物和社会性昆虫群体,个体通过任务专业化和交换物质来共同承担成本和获益。社会性交换的液体,如精液和乳汁,使个体能够在分子水平上影响同种个体。许多社会性昆虫都有一个社会循环系统,在这个系统中,食物和内源性产生的分子通过口对口(唾液营养交换)传递,连接社会中的所有个体。为了了解这些内源性分子与群体生活的关系,我们使用定量蛋白质组学技术研究了木匠蚁群体中的唾液营养交换液。我们发现,群体生活周期的不同阶段循环着不同类型的蛋白质:年轻的群体优先进行直接的碳水化合物处理;成熟的群体则优先积累和传递储存的资源。此外,群体循环的蛋白质与氧化应激、衰老和社会性昆虫等级决定有关,可能作为超级生物体激素发挥作用。在社会网络中离蚁后更近的育雏个体(保育员)表现出更高丰度的与氧化应激相关的蛋白质。因此,唾液营养交换行为可能为社会性昆虫群体中的分布式代谢提供了一种机制。能够彻底分析合作单位之间交换的物质,使得社会性昆虫群体成为理解其他尺度上代谢分工的演变和后果的有用模型。