| Literature DB >> 29488013 |
Fabio Manfredini1, Mark J F Brown2, Amy L Toth3.
Abstract
Cooperation and aggression are ubiquitous in social groups, and the genetic mechanisms underlying these behaviours are of great interest for understanding how social group formation is regulated and how it evolves. In this study, we used a candidate gene approach to investigate the patterns of expression of key genes for cooperation and aggression in the brain of a primitively eusocial wasp, Polistes dominula, during colony founding, when multiple foundresses can join the same nest and establish subtle hierarchies of dominance. We used a comparative approach to select candidate genes for cooperation and aggression looking at two previously published studies on global gene expression in wasps and ants. We tested the expression of these genes in P. dominula wasps that were either displaying aggressive behaviour (dominant and single foundresses) or cooperation (subordinate foundresses and workers) towards nestmates. One gene in particular, the egg yolk protein vitellogenin, known for its reproductive role in insects, displayed patterns of expression that strongly matched wasp social rank. We characterize the genomic context of vitellogenin by building a head co-expression gene network for P. dominula, and we discuss a potential role for vitellogenin as a mediator of social interactions in wasps.Entities:
Keywords: Dominance behaviour; Gene co-expression network.; Social aggression; Vitellogenin; Wasp foundress
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29488013 PMCID: PMC5907630 DOI: 10.1007/s00359-018-1252-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol ISSN: 0340-7594 Impact factor: 1.836
Selection of best candidate genes for cooperation (blue) and aggression (red) in P. dominula based on previous studies
Candidate genes for cooperation: up-regulated (UP) in P. metricus subordinate foundresses (SF) and subordinate workers (SW), and down-regulated (down) in S. invicta pair-founding queens (winners and losers). Candidate genes for aggression: up-regulated in P. metricus dominant foundresses (DF) and dominant workers (DW) and up-regulated also in S. invicta pair-founding queens. Grey cells indicate comparisons that were not statistically different in the study of interest. “Comparison” indicate the significant pairwise comparison for the gene of interest in the P. metricus study: Q = single foundress
Full characterization of 14 foundresses from 7 multiple founding nests that were used for the analysis of brain expression of candidate genes
Unshaded cells correspond to wasps that were assigned to the dominant rank, while shaded cells correspond to wasps that were labelled as subordinate
Fig. 1Brain gene expression in P. dominula females (dominant foundresses, single foundresses, subordinate foundresses and workers) for 9 different candidate genes, as determined by qPCR, and normalized to control genes actin and elongation factor 1. Candidate genes for cooperation are in blue, candidates for aggression are in red and the additional vg/JH-related genes are in black. Means +/− standard errors are reported. Different letters on top of bars correspond to statistically significant differences between two wasp phenotypes (p < 0.05, MANOVA with LSD post hoc tests)
Fig. 2Clustering analysis of the four wasp phenotypes according to patterns of brain gene expression. The heatmap is colour-coded based on average levels of expression of each candidate gene: red = down-regulated; blue = up-regulated
Analysis of correlation of expression for candidate genes
Candidate genes for cooperation are in blue, candidates for aggression are in red and the additional vg/JH-related genes are in black. Correlations that are significant after Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons are highlighted in yellow (significance threshold = 0.005)
Fig. 3a Visualization of the 30 most connected genes in the wasp head network – obtained using the module of 6283 queen-biased genes from the WGCNA analysis on the Standage et al. dataset (2016). The genes visualized in the network correspond also to the genes that have the highest correlation with vg expression levels in the P. dominula head. Red node = major hub (most connected gene); large grey nodes = secondary hubs. b REVIGO analysis of GO terms associated with the 1999 vg-correlated genes in the wasp head. Output limited to Biological Processes only. The most meaningful terms for each cluster are reported in the figure—while for a full list of GO terms in each cluster please see Supp Table 13. Node colours are coded according to the size of the respective GO terms in the Gene Ontology database: warmer colours indicate larger terms