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Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination

BACKGROUND: Depending on their larval environment, female honeybees develop into either queens or workers. As in other polyphenisms, this developmental switch depends not on genomic differences between queens and workers but on the differential expression of entire suites of genes involved with larv...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Evans, Jay D, Wheeler, Diana E
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC17597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11178278
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author Evans, Jay D
Wheeler, Diana E
author_facet Evans, Jay D
Wheeler, Diana E
author_sort Evans, Jay D
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depending on their larval environment, female honeybees develop into either queens or workers. As in other polyphenisms, this developmental switch depends not on genomic differences between queens and workers but on the differential expression of entire suites of genes involved with larval fate. As such, this and other polyphenic systems can provide a novel tool for understanding how genomes and environmental conditions interact to produce different developmental trajectories. Here we use gene-expression profiles during honeybee caste determination to present the first genomic view of polyphenic development. RESULTS: Larvae raised as queens or workers differed greatly in their gene-expression patterns. Workers remained more faithful than queens to the expression profiles of younger, bipotential, larvae. Queens appeared to both downregulate many of the genes expressed by bipotential larvae and turn on a distinct set of caste-related genes. Queens overexpressed several metabolic enzymes, workers showed increased expression of a member of the cytochrome P450 family, hexameric storage proteins and dihydrodiol dehydrogenase, and young larvae overexpressed two putative heat-shock proteins (70 and 90 kDa), and several proteins related to RNA processing and translation. CONCLUSIONS: Large differences in gene expression between queens and workers indicate that social insect castes have faced strong directional selection pressures. Overexpression of metabolic enzymes by queen-destined larvae appears to reflect the enhanced growth rate of queens during late larval development. Many of the differently expressed genes we identified have been tied to metabolic rates and cellular responses to hormones, a result consistent with known physiological differences between queen and worker larvae.
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spelling pubmed-175972001-03-08 Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination Evans, Jay D Wheeler, Diana E Genome Biol Research BACKGROUND: Depending on their larval environment, female honeybees develop into either queens or workers. As in other polyphenisms, this developmental switch depends not on genomic differences between queens and workers but on the differential expression of entire suites of genes involved with larval fate. As such, this and other polyphenic systems can provide a novel tool for understanding how genomes and environmental conditions interact to produce different developmental trajectories. Here we use gene-expression profiles during honeybee caste determination to present the first genomic view of polyphenic development. RESULTS: Larvae raised as queens or workers differed greatly in their gene-expression patterns. Workers remained more faithful than queens to the expression profiles of younger, bipotential, larvae. Queens appeared to both downregulate many of the genes expressed by bipotential larvae and turn on a distinct set of caste-related genes. Queens overexpressed several metabolic enzymes, workers showed increased expression of a member of the cytochrome P450 family, hexameric storage proteins and dihydrodiol dehydrogenase, and young larvae overexpressed two putative heat-shock proteins (70 and 90 kDa), and several proteins related to RNA processing and translation. CONCLUSIONS: Large differences in gene expression between queens and workers indicate that social insect castes have faced strong directional selection pressures. Overexpression of metabolic enzymes by queen-destined larvae appears to reflect the enhanced growth rate of queens during late larval development. Many of the differently expressed genes we identified have been tied to metabolic rates and cellular responses to hormones, a result consistent with known physiological differences between queen and worker larvae. BioMed Central 2001 2000-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC17597/ /pubmed/11178278 Text en Copyright © 2000 GenomeBiology.com
spellingShingle Research
Evans, Jay D
Wheeler, Diana E
Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title_full Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title_fullStr Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title_full_unstemmed Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title_short Expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
title_sort expression profiles during honeybee caste determination
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC17597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11178278
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