SUMMARYThe ectoparasitic mite Varroa destructor and honey bee pathogenic viruses have been implicated in the recent demise of honey bee colonies. Several studies have shown that the combination of V. destructor and deformed wing virus (DWV) poses an especially serious threat to honey bee health. Mites transmitting virulent forms of DWV may cause fatal DWV infections in the developing bee, while pupae parasitised by mites not inducing or activating overt DWV infections may develop normally. Adult bees respond to brood diseases by removing affected brood. This hygienic behaviour is an essential part of the beesʼ immune response repertoire and is also shown towards mite-parasitised brood. However, it is still unclear whether the bees react towards the mite in the brood cell or rather towards the damage done to the brood. We hypothesised that the extent of mite-associated damage rather than the mere presence of parasitising mites triggers hygienic behaviour. Hygienic behaviour assays performed with mites differing in their potential to transmit overt DWV infections revealed that brood parasitised by ʻvirulentʼ mites (i.e. mites with a high potential to induce fatal DWV infections in parasitised pupae) were removed significantly more often than brood parasitised by ʻless virulentʼ mites (i.e. mites with a very low potential to induce overt DWV infections) or non-parasitised brood. Chemical analyses of brood odour profiles suggested that the bees recognise severely affected brood by olfactory cues. Our results suggest that bees show selective, damage-dependent hygienic behaviour, which may be an economic way for colonies to cope with mite infestation. Supplementary material available online at
Army ants have long been suspected to represent an independent origin of multiple queen-mating in the social Hymenoptera. Using microsatellite markers, we show that queens of the African army ant Dorylus (Anomma) molestus have the highest absolute (17.3) and effective (17.5) queen-mating frequencies reported so far for ants. This confirms that obligate multiple queen-mating in social insects is associated with large colony size and advanced social organization, but also raises several novel questions. First, these high estimates place army ants in the range of mating frequencies of honeybees, which have so far been regarded as odd exceptions within the social Hymenoptera. Army ants and honeybees are fundamentally different in morphology and life history, but are the only social insects known that combine obligate multiple mating with reproduction by colony fission and extremely male-biased sex ratios. This implies that the very high numbers of matings in both groups may be due partly to the relatively low costs of additional matings. Second, we were able to trace recent events of colony fission in four of the investigated colonies, where the genotypes of the two queens were only compatible with a mother-daughter relationship. A direct comparison of male production between colonies with offspring from one and two queens, respectively, suggested strongly that new queens do not produce a sexual brood until all workers of the old queen have died, which is consistent with kin selection theory.
Understanding the genetic basis of adaption is a central task in biology. Populations of the honey bee Apis mellifera that inhabit the mountain forests of East Africa differ in behavior and morphology from those inhabiting the surrounding lowland savannahs, which likely reflects adaptation to these habitats. We performed whole genome sequencing on 39 samples of highland and lowland bees from two pairs of populations to determine their evolutionary affinities and identify the genetic basis of these putative adaptations. We find that in general, levels of genetic differentiation between highland and lowland populations are very low, consistent with them being a single panmictic population. However, we identify two loci on chromosomes 7 and 9, each several hundred kilobases in length, which exhibit near fixation for different haplotypes between highland and lowland populations. The highland haplotypes at these loci are extremely rare in samples from the rest of the world. Patterns of segregation of genetic variants suggest that recombination between haplotypes at each locus is suppressed, indicating that they comprise independent structural variants. The haplotype on chromosome 7 harbors nearly all octopamine receptor genes in the honey bee genome. These have a role in learning and foraging behavior in honey bees and are strong candidates for adaptation to highland habitats. Molecular analysis of a putative breakpoint indicates that it may disrupt the coding sequence of one of these genes. Divergence between the highland and lowland haplotypes at both loci is extremely high suggesting that they are ancient balanced polymorphisms that greatly predate divergence between the extant honey bee subspecies.
Vascular effects of ergovaline mediated by 5-hydroxytryptamine(HT)2A, 5-HT1B/1D, and alpha1 receptors were studied in isolated arterial preparations of rat and guinea pig. In rat tail artery ergovaline behaved as a potent contractile partial agonist showing an agonist potency (pEC50) of 8.86 +/- 0.03, a maximum response (Emax) of 59 +/- 2% with respect to 5-HT, and a partial agonist affinity (pK(P)) of 8.51 +/- 0.06. Ergovaline was equipotent with ergotamine (pEC50, 8.69 +/- 0.07; Emax, 52 +/- 4%; pK(P), 8.36 +/- 0.11). Contractile responses to ergovaline and ergotamine were surmountably antagonized by the 5-HT2A receptor antagonist ketanserin (3 nM). Antagonist affinity (apparent pA2) for ketanserin against ergovaline and ergotamine was 9.19 +/- 0.08 and 9.36 +/- 0.17, respectively. Ergovaline showed extremely slow on-set and off-set kinetics in rat tail artery. The construction of cumulative concentration-response curves required about 4 h, and the contractile response to ergovaline (30 nM), which completely abolished the subsequent contractile response to 5-HT (10 nM to 1 mM), could not be reversed by wash-out. In guinea pig iliac artery moderately precontracted with prostaglandin F2alpha (0.05 to 0.5 microM) ergovaline behaved as an agonist (pEC50, 7.71 +/- 0.10) with a potency similar to that of 5-HT (pEC50, 7.60 +/- 0.05). The contractile response to ergovaline was inhibited by the 5-HT1B/1D receptor antagonist GR127935 (10 nM). The apparent pA2 value for GR127935 against ergovaline was 8.90 +/- 0.12. Ergovaline (10 nM) produced no contractile response in guinea pig iliac artery when added before the PGF2alpha-induced precontraction but caused insurmountable blockade of the contractile response to the 5-HT1B/1D receptor agonist 5-carboxamidotryptamine (5-CT). The apparent pA2 value for ergovaline against 5-CT was 8.56 +/- 0.18. In rat thoracic aorta ergovaline (2 microM) activated alpha1 adrenoceptors only with low efficacy (Emax, 12 +/- 3%) but surmountably antagonized norepinephrine-induced contractions with a pK(P) of 7.07 +/- 0.12. It is concluded that the powerful constrictor effect of ergovaline mediated by activation of vascular 5-HT2A and 5-HT1B/1D receptors may explain the vascular symptoms of fescue toxicosis observed in livestock grazing tall fescue pastures infected with the endophytic fungus Neotyphodium coenophialum.
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