| Literature DB >> 26462583 |
Elisa Frasnelli1, Albrecht Haase2,3, Elisa Rigosi4,5, Gianfranco Anfora6, Lesley J Rogers7, Giorgio Vallortigara8.
Abstract
The honeybee Apis mellifera, with a brain of only 960,000 neurons and the ability to perform sophisticated cognitive tasks, has become an excellent model in life sciences and in particular in cognitive neurosciences. It has been used in our laboratories to investigate brain and behavioural asymmetries, i.e., the different functional specializations of the right and the left sides of the brain. It is well known that bees can learn to associate an odour stimulus with a sugar reward, as demonstrated by extension of the proboscis when presented with the trained odour in the so-called Proboscis Extension Reflex (PER) paradigm. Bees recall this association better when trained using their right antenna than they do when using their left antenna. They also retrieve short-term memory of this task better when using the right antenna. On the other hand, when tested for long-term memory recall, bees respond better when using their left antenna. Here we review a series of behavioural studies investigating bees' lateralization, integrated with electrophysiological measurements to study asymmetries of olfactory sensitivity, and discuss the possible evolutionary origins of these asymmetries. We also present morphological data obtained by scanning electron microscopy and two-photon microscopy. Finally, a behavioural study conducted in a social context is summarised, showing that honeybees control context-appropriate social interactions using their right antenna, rather than the left, thus suggesting that lateral biases in behaviour might be associated with requirements of social life.Entities:
Keywords: 2-photon microscopy; PER; behavioural asymmetry; electroantennography; lateralization; learning; memory recall; population-level; sensilla; sociality
Year: 2014 PMID: 26462583 PMCID: PMC4592634 DOI: 10.3390/insects5010120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Proboscis Extension Reflex (PER) paradigm. (A) Harnessed bee with both antennae in use. (B) Harnessed bee with only the right antenna in use—the left antenna is coated with a black silicone compound. (Photo by Elisa Rigosi).
Figure 2Recall of olfactory memory in honeybees at various times by lateral presentation of the odour. (A) A photograph of lateral presentation of the odour. (B) The mean number of A responses (i.e., extension of the proboscis to the positive stimulus and no extension to the negative stimulus), plotted with standard error bars, in recall tested at various intervals after training is shown for presentations of the odours on the bee’s left side (open circles) or right side (closed circles). (From [16]).
Figure 3Electroantennographic (EAG) responses. Mean EAG ± SEM absolute responses (mV) of right (unbroken lines with black squares) and left (dotted lines with empty squares) antenna of (A) A. mellifera (N = 16), (B) O. cornuta (N = 21) and (C) B. terrestris foragers (N = 20) to isoamyl acetate (left) and (−)-linalool (right) at five different doses (Log10 µg/µL). (From [20,21]).
Figure 4Scanning electron microscopy (SEM). (A) Low-magnification SEM image of the ventral view of A. mellifera left antenna. Segments from 3rd to 10th were imaged for subsequent counting of sensilla. (B) and (C) Scanning electron micrographs of the antenna of A. mellifera forager. Pl, sensillum placodeum; Ta, sensillum trichodeum type a; Tb, sensillum trichodeum type b; Ba, sensillum basiconicum thick; Bb, sensillum basiconicum tapered; Ch, sensillum chaeticum; Co, sensillum coeloconicum; Ca, sensillum campaniformium. (From [40]).
Figure 5(A) Single image of the left antennal lobe of Apis mellifera acquired with two-photon microscopy at an imaging depth of approximately 80 µm. The reconstructed volume images of the analysed glomeruli are superimposed (From [18]). (B) Right and left absolute volumes of the 5 glomeruli of the honeybee antennal lobes that were investigated by Rigosi and colleagues [18]. Mean values are shown (±SEM, N = 12); (From [18]).
Summary of the behavioural studies reported in Section 2.
| Bee Species | Lateralized Behaviour | References |
|---|---|---|
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| Right-antenna advantage in olfactory performance | [ |
| Right-eye advantage in visual performance | [ | |
| Use of the right antenna in short-term memory recall and of the left antenna in long-term memory recall: a functional lateral shift | [ | |
| Response competition associated with right–left antennal asymmetries of new and old olfactory memory traces | [ | |
| Short-term memory lateralization may be odour-specific, or the lateral shift in the transition from short-term to long-term memory occurs at different time scales for different types of odours | [ | |
| Right-antenna in social interactions | [ | |
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| Use of the right antenna in short-term memory recall and of the left antenna in long-term memory recall | [ |
|
| No right-antenna advantage in olfactory performance | [ |
|
| Right-antenna advantage in olfactory performance | [ |
|
| Asymmetry in circling around a vertical inflorescence | [ |
| Social learning drives handedness in nectar-robbing bumblebees | [ |