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NEWS
INDEX
2001
2002
June
Three researchers to
take part in mapping the honeybee genome
6/18/02
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
A buzz being heard around
the entomology department these days is a genomic celebration. Three
departmental researchers will have key roles in a recently announced
federal project to map the some 15,000 genes of a honeybee (Apis mellifera).
The work, to be done at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, is
the brainchild of Gene Robinson, a professor of entomology and neuroscience
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Robinson, the head
of the university's bee research program, and colleagues Hugh Robertson
and Susan Fahrbach were part of a group that proposed the project to
the National Institutes of Healths National Human Genome Research
Institute (NHGRI).
"The information that we can gain from this project will dramatically
enhance the value of the honeybee as a model for studies of how genes
influence social behavior, brain function, host-pathogen relations,
and a host of other factors," Robinson said.
The honeybee was among the next group of organisms named by the NHGRI
as high priority for sequencing. Current institute projects involving
the human, mouse and rat genomes are nearing completion. In addition
to the honeybee, other new high-priority organisms are the chicken,
chimpanzee, various species of fungi, a sea urchin and Tetrahymena,
a microscopic creature often used in laboratory studies.
No set timetable was established for the new projects, although Robinson
said the honeybee work could begin late this year at Baylor's Human
Genome Sequencing Center.
In its announcement, the NHGRI noted that honeybee has "powerful
social instincts and unique behavioral traits" of interest to neurobiologists.
The bee also pollinates agricultural crops and offers insight on human
problems such as antibiotic resistance, immunity, allergic reaction,
mental health and genetic diseases, the NHGRI noted.
Robinson and Fahrbach have been involved in studies directly related
to several aspects noted by the institute, specifically behavioral traits
and brain functioning.
Robertson will coordinate the effort to annotate the genome, that is,
determine the gene structures, amino acid sequences and protein activities
encoded by the bee genome. His participation will begin after initial
sequencing is completed at Baylor.
Robinson organized a proposal for the honeybee beginning last year,
after the NHGRI invited scientists to identify organisms whose genomes
may prove to be beneficial for research. A peer review system chose
which organisms would be high priority.
In the paper, Robinson and colleagues noted that, "Though phylogenetically
distant, honeybees live in societies that rival our own in complexity,
internal cohesion, and success in dealing with the myriad challenges
posed by social life, including those related to communication, aging,
social dysfunction and infectious disease."
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