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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Biology
Gene plays key evolutionary
role in food-gathering behaviors
James
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
4/25/02
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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Gene
Robinson, a professor of entomology and neuroscience, left,
and Yehuda Ben-Shahar, a doctoral student, have found the
honeybee gene that plays a key evolutionary role in food-gathering
behaviors.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
A new discovery in the brain of honeybees has researchers at
three institutions suggesting that the gene they studied has played
a key evolutionary role in the changes of food-gathering behaviors in
many creatures.
When honeybees (Apis mellifera) grow up and leave the hive to begin
foraging, their transition is helped along by an increase in the activity
of the foraging gene (for). It stimulates an activity-boosting enzyme
in some of the brains visual processing centers, the researchers
report in the April 26 issue of Science. Precocious foragers
bees stimulated to forage early also have significantly higher
brain levels of the gene's messenger RNA and four-fold higher levels
of the enzyme, a cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase called PKG.
Two forms of for previously had been found to influence naturally occurring
variation in foraging behavior in Drosophila. "Rover" flies
that cover large areas have high levels of PKG, while "sitter"
flies that gather food nearby have low levels. PKG also has been linked
to feeding arousal in some other invertebrates and vertebrates.
Honeybees live in a social world known for its distinct age-related
division of labor. They begin their adult life working inside the hive
as sanitation workers and nursemaids, among other roles. Foraging begins
at two to three weeks of age, or whenever the needs of a colony require
it. Nurse bees "loosely resemble sitter flies because they obtain
food only in the more restricted confines of the beehive, while forager
bees display rover-like behavior by ranging widely throughout the environment,"
the researchers wrote.
"The fact that at the molecular level there is a loose analogy
between sitter flies and nurse bees on one hand and rover flies and
foragers on the other hand is interesting for two reasons," said
Gene Robinson, a professor of entomology and neuroscience at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
"First, it supports the idea that for may have had an evolutionary
role in the changes of food-gathering behaviors in many creatures. Second,
it demonstrates how the same gene in different species can be responsive
to change over vastly different time scales an evolutionary time
scale in flies and a maturational or developmental one in bees,"
he said.
Before becoming foragers, honeybees make the transition from their role
as nurses by going through a series of gradually widening orientation
flights. During this time there are changes in brain chemistry and structure,
endocrine activity and gene expression. Robinson and colleagues theorized
that increased gene activity was necessary to drive behavioral change.
Other genes had been implicated, but for is the first one shown to actually
affect division of labor in honeybee colonies.
The researchers measured levels of the gene and its enzyme activity
in precocious foragers to assure that the brain changes were not simply
a natural result of age. Higher levels of gene expression and enzyme
activity occurred in both in foragers making the transition in typical
fashion (two to three weeks) and in those manipulated to forage at seven
to nine days.
Additionally, the researchers used a pharmacological approach, feeding
an experimental group of young bees with an analog that stimulated PKG
activity. The treated bees started to forage precociously, while untreated
bees did not.
The researchers believe that for and other genes that affect similar
behaviors in different species might represent a class of genes that
are particularly important to understanding the ways that genes influence
behavior.
The authors of the paper are Robinson, Yehuda Ben-Shahar, a doctoral
student in the entomology department at Illinois; M.B. Sokolowski of
the zoology department at the University of Toronto's Mississauga campus;
and A. Robichon of the National Center for Scientific Research at the
University of Bourgogne in France. The National Institutes of Health,
Burroughs-Wellcome Trust and Canada Research Chair Program funded the
research.
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