4.5 Article

Uncovering the role of juvenile hormone in ovary development and egg laying in bumble bees

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JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
卷 150, 期 -, 页码 -

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2023.104557

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Bumble bees; Juvenile hormone; Methoprene; Gonadotropin; Ovary development; Oviposition

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This study investigates the effects of hibernation state, caste, and species on the gonadotropic effect of juvenile hormone (JH) in bumble bee queens. The results indicate that JH does not directly promote ovary development in hibernated queens, but does have a stimulatory effect in non-hibernated queens. Additionally, JH does not have significant gonadotropic effects in workers. The findings suggest that factors beyond JH elevation are required for oviposition and colony initiation.
Juvenile hormone (JH) regulates developmental and physiological processes in insects. In bumble bees, the hormone acts as a gonadotropin that mediates ovary development, but the exact physiological pathways involved in ovary activation and subsequent egg laying are poorly understood. In this study, we examine how queen hibernation state, caste, and species impact the gonadotropic effect of JH in bumble bee queens through methoprene (JH analogue) application. We extend previous research by assessing queen egg laying and colony initiation, alongside ovary development. Furthermore, we compared sensitivity of workers of both species to the juvenile hormone's gonadotropic effect. In both bumble bee species, the ovaries of hibernated queens were developed five to six days after breaking diapause, regardless of methoprene treatment. By contrast, methoprene did have a stimulatory effect on ovary development in non-hibernated queens. The dose needed to obtain this effect was higher in B. impatiens. Methoprene did not have gonadotropic effects in callow workers of both species. These results indicate that the physiological effect of exogenous methoprene application varies according to species, caste and hibernation status. Interestingly, despite gonadotropic effects in non-hibernated queens, oviposition was not accelerated by JH. This suggests that JH alone is insufficient to induce egg laying and that an additional stimulus, which is naturally present in hibernated queens, is required. Consequently, our findings indicate that other physiological processes, beyond a rise in JH alone, are required for oviposition and colony initiation.

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