4.6 Article

Reproductive activation in honeybee (Apis mellifera) workers protects against abiotic and biotic stress

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0737

Keywords

ageing; longevity regulation; oxidative stress; reproduction; viruses; RNA-Seq

Categories

Funding

  1. UNCG Biology Department
  2. Ecology, Evolution and Behavior Graduate Program of UT Austin
  3. US Department of Agriculture (Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service) [16-8130-0636-CA]
  4. US Department of Defense (Army Research Office) [W911NF1520045]
  5. National Institutes of Health (National Institute on Aging) [R21AG046837]

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Social insect reproductives show exceptional longevity, with even workers experiencing increased lifespan when assuming a reproductive role. Reproductive activation enhances immunity and oxidative stress resistance, preemptively protecting against stressors and potentially explaining the extended lifespan of social insect reproductives.
Social insect reproductives exhibit exceptional longevity instead of the classic trade-off between somatic maintenance and reproduction. Even normally sterile workers experience a significant increase in life expectancy when they assume a reproductive role. The mechanisms that enable the positive relation between the antagonistic demands of reproduction and somatic maintenance are unclear. To isolate the effect of reproductive activation, honeybee workers were induced to activate their ovaries. These reproductively activated workers were compared to controls for survival and gene expression patterns after exposure to Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus or the oxidative stressor paraquat. Reproductive activation increased survival, indicating better immunity and oxidative stress resistance. After qPCR analysis confirmed our experimental treatments at the physiological level, whole transcriptome analysis revealed that paraquat treatment significantly changed the expression of 1277 genes in the control workers but only two genes in reproductively activated workers, indicating that reproductive activation preemptively protects against oxidative stress. Significant overlap between genes that were upregulated by reproductive activation and in response to paraquat included prominent members of signalling pathways and anti-oxidants known to affect ageing. Thus, while our results confirm a central role of vitellogenin, they also point to other mechanisms to explain the molecular basis of the lack of a cost of reproduction and the exceptional longevity of social insect reproductives. Thus, socially induced reproductive activation preemptively protects honeybee workers against stressors, explaining their longevity. This article is part of the theme issue 'Ageing and sociality: why, when and how does sociality change ageing patterns?'

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