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RESEARCH
Science
Entomology
Gene expression tied to social
behavior in honey bees
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
10/9/03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Genes and behavior go together in honey bees so strongly that an individual
bee’s occupation can be predicted by knowing a profile of its
gene expression in the brain, say researchers at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign.
This strong relationship surfaced in a complex molecular study of 6,878
different genes replicated with 72 cDNA microarrays that captured the
essence of brain gene activity within the natural world of the honey
bee (Apis mellifera). Even though most of the differences in gene expression
were small, the changes were observable in 40 percent of the genes studied,
the scientists report in the Oct. 10 issue of the journal Science.
“We have discovered a clear molecular signature in the bee brain
that is robustly associated with behavior,” said principal researcher
Gene E. Robinson, a professor of entomology
and director of the Neuroscience
Program at Illinois. “This provides a striking picture of
the genome as a dynamic entity, more actively involved in modulating
behavior in the adult brain than we previously thought.”
Microarrays let researchers get a broad view of gene activity by generating
simultaneous measurements of messenger RNA, which reflect levels of
protein activity. The mRNA binds to specific sites on the array, allowing
for the measurement of expression from thousands of genes.
Robinson, who also holds the G. William Arends Professorship in Integrative
Biology at Illinois, and colleagues generated mRNA profiles from
60 different bees who were working either as nurses (taking care of
the brood within the hive) or foragers (gathering food outside). A computer
program was able to use the profiles to determine correctly, for 57
of 60 the bees, which individual belonged to what group.
Behavioral differences between nurses and foragers are part of an age-related,
socially regulated division of bee labor. Nurses perform care-giving
duties for their first two to three weeks of life, then shift to foraging
for nectar and pollen. As the behavioral transition occurs the bees
experience changes in brain structure, brain chemistry, and, as this
new study shows, many changes in gene expression.
Robinson, whose research is part of a federally funded project to sequence
the honey bee genome, has long been interested in the mechanisms involved
in honey bee division of labor as a model to understand the relationships
between genes, brain and behavior.
After an initial analysis showed differences between nurses and foragers,
the researchers faced the problem of relating these differences to either
age or behavior, because foragers are both behaviorally different and
older than nurses. So Robinson and colleagues created colonies consisting
entirely of same-aged bees. In the absence of older bees, some individuals
in a hive will begin foraging up to two weeks earlier than usual while
others will grow up normally and act as nurses, making for age-matched
young nurses and foragers. Age-matched old foragers and old nurses also
were obtained from these colonies.
A dominant pattern of gene expression emerged, and it “was clearly
associated with behavior,” the researchers wrote. Since precocious
foraging is a response to the shortage of foragers, this finding indicates
that the genome is responding dynamically to changes in the bee’s
social environment, Robinson said.
The study was unique, he said, because it focused on individual profiles.
Previous studies of gene expression and behavior in mice and flies,
for instance, have focused on group tendencies, looking at pools of
individuals.
Robinson’s colleagues on the paper were Charles W. Whitfield,
a postdoctoral researcher in the department of entomology, and undergraduate
Anne-Marie Cziko.
The research was funded by a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral
Fellowship in Bioinformatics to Whitfield and by grants from the University
of Illinois Critical Research Initiatives Program and Burroughs Wellcome
Trust.
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