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High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Maternal effects are a wise strategy for animals to adjust their offspring quality. Honey bee queens can adjust their investments in their female offspring to maximize the use of social resources, and these different investments may eventually lead to differing offspring quality. How...

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Autores principales: Yu, Longtao, Shi, Xinxin, He, Xujiang, Zeng, Zhijiang, Yan, Weiyu, Wu, Xiaobo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9146148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35621820
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050486
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author Yu, Longtao
Shi, Xinxin
He, Xujiang
Zeng, Zhijiang
Yan, Weiyu
Wu, Xiaobo
author_facet Yu, Longtao
Shi, Xinxin
He, Xujiang
Zeng, Zhijiang
Yan, Weiyu
Wu, Xiaobo
author_sort Yu, Longtao
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Maternal effects are a wise strategy for animals to adjust their offspring quality. Honey bee queens can adjust their investments in their female offspring to maximize the use of social resources, and these different investments may eventually lead to differing offspring quality. However, maternal effects on the quality of reared queens in artificial queen rearing has been ignored. To elucidate the maternal effects on the phenotypic and genetic alterations of reared queens, we examined the effect of ova sources caused by maternal effects on the development of reared queens and their offspring queens. Our results will shed light on improving the quality of reared queens and promoting the development of beekeeping. ABSTRACT: Honey bees, rather than rear queens with eggs and larvae from worker cells, prefer to rear new queens with eggs form queen cells, if available. This may be a result of long-term evolutionary process for honey bee colonies. However, the exact mechanism of this phenomenon is unclear. In this study, queens were reared with eggs from queen cells (F1-QE), eggs from worker cells (F1-WE), and two-day-old larvae from worker cells (F1-2L). Physiological indexes and the expression of the development-related genes ((Hexamerin (Hex110, Hex70b), Transferrin (Trf), and Vitellogenin (Vg)) of reared F1 generation queens were measured and compared. Furthermore, F2 generation queens were reared with one-day-old larvae from F1 queens, and the weight and ovariole count of reared F2 generation daughter queens were examined. Meanwhile, the expression of the development- and reproduction-related genes (Hex110, Hex70b, Trf, Vg, and Juvenile Hormone (Jh)) and immune detoxication-related genes (Hymenoptaecin, Abeacin, and CytP450) of reared F2 queens were further explored. We found that the F1-QE queens had the highest physiological indexes and higher Hex110 and Trf expression levels, while no significant difference was found in the expression of Hex70b and Vg among the three groups of F1 queens. In addition, the reared queens of F2-QE had the highest quality, with the highest development, reproduction, immune-detoxication genes’ expression levels. Our results revealed that the quality of reared offspring queens from high-quality mother queens was also high. These findings inform methods for rearing high-quality queens and highlight that a high-quality queen is essential for offspring colony growth and survival.
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spelling pubmed-91461482022-05-29 High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens Yu, Longtao Shi, Xinxin He, Xujiang Zeng, Zhijiang Yan, Weiyu Wu, Xiaobo Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Maternal effects are a wise strategy for animals to adjust their offspring quality. Honey bee queens can adjust their investments in their female offspring to maximize the use of social resources, and these different investments may eventually lead to differing offspring quality. However, maternal effects on the quality of reared queens in artificial queen rearing has been ignored. To elucidate the maternal effects on the phenotypic and genetic alterations of reared queens, we examined the effect of ova sources caused by maternal effects on the development of reared queens and their offspring queens. Our results will shed light on improving the quality of reared queens and promoting the development of beekeeping. ABSTRACT: Honey bees, rather than rear queens with eggs and larvae from worker cells, prefer to rear new queens with eggs form queen cells, if available. This may be a result of long-term evolutionary process for honey bee colonies. However, the exact mechanism of this phenomenon is unclear. In this study, queens were reared with eggs from queen cells (F1-QE), eggs from worker cells (F1-WE), and two-day-old larvae from worker cells (F1-2L). Physiological indexes and the expression of the development-related genes ((Hexamerin (Hex110, Hex70b), Transferrin (Trf), and Vitellogenin (Vg)) of reared F1 generation queens were measured and compared. Furthermore, F2 generation queens were reared with one-day-old larvae from F1 queens, and the weight and ovariole count of reared F2 generation daughter queens were examined. Meanwhile, the expression of the development- and reproduction-related genes (Hex110, Hex70b, Trf, Vg, and Juvenile Hormone (Jh)) and immune detoxication-related genes (Hymenoptaecin, Abeacin, and CytP450) of reared F2 queens were further explored. We found that the F1-QE queens had the highest physiological indexes and higher Hex110 and Trf expression levels, while no significant difference was found in the expression of Hex70b and Vg among the three groups of F1 queens. In addition, the reared queens of F2-QE had the highest quality, with the highest development, reproduction, immune-detoxication genes’ expression levels. Our results revealed that the quality of reared offspring queens from high-quality mother queens was also high. These findings inform methods for rearing high-quality queens and highlight that a high-quality queen is essential for offspring colony growth and survival. MDPI 2022-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9146148/ /pubmed/35621820 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050486 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Yu, Longtao
Shi, Xinxin
He, Xujiang
Zeng, Zhijiang
Yan, Weiyu
Wu, Xiaobo
High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title_full High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title_fullStr High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title_full_unstemmed High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title_short High-Quality Queens Produce High-Quality Offspring Queens
title_sort high-quality queens produce high-quality offspring queens
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9146148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35621820
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050486
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