| Literature DB >> 28145404 |
Christopher B Cunningham1, Majors J Badgett2,3, Richard B Meagher1, Ron Orlando3,4, Allen J Moore1.
Abstract
Ethologists predicted that parental care evolves by modifying behavioural precursors in the asocial ancestor. As a corollary, we predict that the evolved mechanistic changes reside in genetic pathways underlying these traits. Here we test our hypothesis in female burying beetles, Nicrophorus vespilloides, an insect where caring adults regurgitate food to begging, dependent offspring. We quantify neuropeptide abundance in brains collected from three behavioural states: solitary virgins, individuals actively parenting or post-parenting solitary adults and quantify 133 peptides belonging to 18 neuropeptides. Eight neuropeptides differ in abundance in one or more states, with increased abundance during parenting in seven. None of these eight neuropeptides have been associated with parental care previously, but all have roles in predicted behavioural precursors for parenting. Our study supports the hypothesis that predictable traits and pathways are targets of selection during the evolution of parenting and suggests additional candidate neuropeptides to study in the context of parenting.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28145404 PMCID: PMC5296637 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms14225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1A female burying beetle feeding her offspring.
In this species, a parent spends around 72 h preparing a carcass, after which larvae hatch and arrive at the carcass. Once larvae arrive, parents spend a further 72 h feeding larvae (with peak parenting 12–24 h after larval arrival), and then disperse around 100 h after larvae first arrive on the carcass. Larvae disperse fully grown around 125 h after their arrival on the carcass. As shown here, feeding involves direct mouth-to-mouth contact and a transfer of pre-digested carrion from the parent to the offspring. Photograph by AJM.
Figure 2Principal component analysis of neuropeptide relative abundances.
Graph of the association between abundances and three non-parenting and parenting behavioural states of Nicrophorus vespilloides (red: virgin, black: actively parenting, blue: post-parenting). Principal component analysis (PCA) based on four biological replicates of each behavioural state, with eight individual brains pooled to form a biological sample. Ellipses show the 95% confidence area of each group.
Principal component analysis (PCA) of neuropeptide abundance of virgins, actively caring and post-caring Nicrophorus vespilloides females.
| NPLP-1 | 0.307 | −0.203 | 0.034 | −0.156 | −0.184 |
| TK | 0.315 | −0.061 | 0.231 | 0.110 | −0.297 |
| NVP | 0.276 | 0.173 | 0.215 | 0.289 | 0.027 |
| DH31 | 0.171 | 0.103 | 0.244 | −0.578 | 0.131 |
| FMRFa | 0.274 | 0.182 | −0.302 | −0.260 | −0.058 |
| ITG | 0.233 | −0.291 | −0.108 | −0.340 | 0.185 |
| SIFa | 0.089 | −0.475 | 0.174 | 0.068 | 0.149 |
| IDL | 0.221 | −0.289 | 0.265 | 0.046 | 0.047 |
| SK | 0.281 | −0.164 | −0.385 | 0.144 | −0.068 |
| MYO | 0.249 | −0.226 | −0.388 | −0.031 | −0.253 |
| MIP | 0.190 | 0.317 | −0.079 | 0.267 | 0.296 |
| RYa | 0.189 | 0.363 | −0.344 | −0.152 | 0.068 |
| PBAN | 0.290 | 0.235 | 0.095 | −0.046 | −0.182 |
| NTL | 0.234 | 0.047 | −0.112 | 0.356 | 0.406 |
| sNPF | 0.205 | 0.180 | 0.327 | −0.221 | 0.381 |
| DH47 | 0.201 | 0.239 | 0.291 | 0.147 | −0.496 |
| CCAP | −0.285 | 0.175 | −0.027 | −0.204 | −0.218 |
| Eigenvalues | 7.013 | 3.387 | 1.859 | 1.588 | 1.246 |
| % Variance explained | 41.25 | 19.93 | 10.94 | 9.34 | 7.33 |
PCs with eigenvalues exceeding 1 are reported.