THE GENETICS OF SOCIETY
Researchers aim to
unravel the molecular mechanisms by which a single genotype gives rise to
diverse castes in eusocial organisms.
Eusocial insects are
among the most successful living creatures on Earth. Found in terrestrial ecosystems
across the globe (on every continent except Antarctica), the world’s ants alone
weigh more than all vertebrates put together. Bees are key pollinators of major
crops as well as many other ecologically important plants. Termites construct
thermoregulating homes that can dominate the landscape, and that are inspiring
new energy-efficient skyscraper designs. The organization and collective
decision making of eusocial insects is even yielding new insights into human
behavior and what it means to be part of a society. But one of the biggest
unanswered questions in our understanding of these complex insect groups is how
a single genome can produce such diverse and contrasting physical and
behavioral forms, from egg layers, provisioners, and caretakers to soldiers.
In a eusocial colony, reproduction is
dominated by one or a few individuals adapted to egg laying, while their
offspring—colony workers—display physical and behavioral adaptations that help
them perform their subordinate roles. These phenotypic adaptations can be
extreme. A leafcutter ant queen is 10 times larger than her smallest workers,
for example. (See photograph below.) And some carpenter ant species have
evolved a “kamikaze” caste, born with a self-destruct button that causes the
insect to explode upon colony attack, killing itself and covering the invading
animals in toxic chemicals. Remarkably, differences in the behavior and
morphology of insect castes are usually generated through differences in the
expression of identical sets of genes. (There are a few cases of genetically
determined castes, but this is the exception, not the rule.)
The extreme altruism exhibited by eusocial
insects was one of the most perplexing traits that Darwin encountered when
developing his theory of natural selection.
We are now entering a new era of research
into eusocial insects. For the first time, scientists are investigating the
molecules that underlie eusocial behavior at a depth that was previously
unimaginable. New, affordable sequencing technologies enable scientists to
examine how genes across the entire genome are regulated to generate different
caste phenotypes, the roles of DNA methylation and microRNAs in this
differential expression, and what proteins are synthesized as a result. This
burgeoning area of research, dubbed “sociogenomics” in 2005 by Gene E.
Robinson,1 is
revolutionizing our understanding of the evolution of eusociality from a
solitary wasp-like ancestor to the million-strong colonies we see today. New
work is yielding insights into how genomes interact dynamically with the
physical and social environment to produce highly adapted, specialized castes
with remarkable phenotypic innovations. These findings are, in turn,
illuminating the importance of gene regulation and epigenetics in controlling
behavioral plasticity across the animal kingdom.
The birth of
eusociality
© ALEX WILDThe extreme altruism
exhibited by eusocial insects was one of the most perplexing traits that Darwin
encountered when developing his theory of natural selection. How can nature
select for a worker phenotype, which exists solely to help others reproduce,
when it does not have any offspring of its own? We now understand that worker
behavior can evolve because workers still pass on their genes through the
related offspring they help raise. This has allowed eusociality to evolve
multiple times throughout biological history: 10 times in the Hymenoptera (the
ants, bees, and wasps), and an additional 22 times in termites, aphids, thrips,
and snapping shrimps. It has even appeared a couple of times in mammals, with
independent origins in two species of mole rat. (See “Underground Supermodels,” The Scientist, June 2012.)
Each eusocial lineage evolved from a
solitary ancestor—a species in which a single genome produced a single adult
phenotype, as is the case for the majority of insects alive today. Based on the
morphology of both extant and extinct species, it was long believed that bees
represented the most ancestral of the hymenopteran lineages. However, recent
high-throughput sequencing of transcriptomes indicates that wasps may in fact
be the more ancient group, with bees and ants having diverged from the wasp
lineage around 145 million years ago.2,3 The first eusocial societies were
simple, much like some of today’s halictid bees and Polistes paper wasps, whose
behavioral castes look identical. Since then the order Hymenoptera has diverged
into more than 14,000 eusocial species spanning almost every level of social
organization, including the much more complex societies of honeybees, ants, and
others. Collectively, these insects provide glimpses into the evolution of
eusociality. (See illustration.)
So how did we get from a solitary ancestor to
a species with diverse specialized phenotypes? A long-standing hypothesis,
proposed by the eminent social insect biologist Mary Jane West-Eberhard, goes
like this: the solitary ancestor lived as a single mother; she laid eggs and
foraged alone to provide food for her growing brood. Once mature, her offspring
would leave the nest to forage and reproduce, also on their own. This is how
most insects still make a living. One of the first steps on the road to
eusociality was for these offspring to stay behind at the nest for some time
into adulthood, where they helped their mother raise their younger siblings. As
these helpers evolved to specialize in particular roles, characteristics and
behaviors that were once enacted sequentially by the solitary female slowly
became decoupled. Reproductive traits were the exclusive responsibility of a
newly evolved phenotype, the “queen,” and behaviors such as foraging were now
performed by another new phenotype—the “worker.”
The hypothesis that social castes arose from
the decoupling of once-solitary behaviors is compelling in its simplicity and
its conformity with a well-established theory on the molecular mechanisms of
evolution. Like the HOX cluster, a relatively small set of genes that underpins
multicellular development in almost all life on Earth, a genetic toolkit for
social behavior could have enabled the evolution of eusocial systems via an
uncoupling of the genes regulating different solitary behaviors. If so, we
expect to find suites of the same “toolkit” genes regulating caste-specific
morphology and behavior across multiple independent evolutionary iterations of
eusocial life. These genes may have been predisposed to a role in eusocial
behavior, perhaps because of their key role in provisioning or in physiological
activity.
Although this mechanism is supported by
behavioral data, we have previously lacked the molecular tools to help us test
the importance of phenotypic uncoupling in caste evolution. The genome
sequences of 11 eusocial hymenopteran species have now been published, and
these data are further accompanied by caste-specific transcriptomic and
proteomic analyses. Together, these resources are unveiling the gene-level
dynamics that underlie eusocial behavior. Methylome and microRNA sequencing
have also begun to reveal the regulatory factors involved in mediating
caste-biased differential gene expression.
Make
new genes, but keep the old
CATHERINE DELPHIATo some extent, recent sociogenomic studies have confirmed the existence of common genes underlying queen and worker phenotypes across social species. For example, a gene associated with roving behaviors in fruit flies and nematodes, in which the animals go looking for food, is also associated with foraging behavior in honeybees, ants, and bumblebees, which represent multiple independent origins of eusociality. Moreover, recent investigations of division of labor in eusocial insects with simpler societies have highlighted many of the same toolkit genes associated with castes found in the highly eusocial honeybee.
Some of these “old” genes have adopted new
functions in certain species. The ancestral function of juvenile hormone (JH),
for example, was to produce yolk for egg development. And in all eusocial
insects studied to date, JH is upregulated in queens, suggesting they retain
the gene’s ancestral function. However, JH has also evolved a new
function—regulating foraging behavior in workers of several eusocial species.
In honeybee workers, JH regulates the fine-scale, age-based transition from
nursing (as a young worker) to foraging (as an older worker). Recent studies
have also shown that the hormone forms a functional link between insulin
signaling pathways and the insect neuroendocrine system, which allows foraging
and brood-rearing behavior to be modulated by the nutritional and energetic
needs of both the individual and the colony.
Sociogenomic analyses are also unearthing
surprises. Across three independent origins of eusociality in bees, two-thirds
of genes that show recent rapid evolution were linked to the level of
eusociality—complex or simple.4 Such
genes include novel, or taxonomically restricted, genes—those that have evolved
uniquely in a single taxonomic group, and so, to date, lack any sequence
similarity with any known organism outside the sequenced group. In the honeybee
gene set, for example, more than 250 genes are “orphans,” meaning they are
unique to honeybees, or are restricted to the Hymenoptera; of these, 58 percent
are expressed differently in queens and workers or in different worker castes.5 More
than 40 percent of worker-biased genes in the rock ant Temnothorax
longispinosus,6 and
75 percent of caste-biased genes in the paper wasp Polistes
canadensis,2 are novel.
Thus, a core sociality toolkit appears to
have been augmented by the de novo birth of novel genes and gene families and
rapid evolution of ancestral genes to generate queen and worker phenotypes in
eusocial insects. But our understanding of the role of orphan genes is largely
dependent on the available sequence data. As more species are sequenced over
the coming years, our picture of the importance of new, old, and modified genes
in eusocial evolution will become clearer.
From genotype to
phenotype
© ANDREY
PAVLOV/SHUTTERSTOCKDifferential expression of shared genes is just one small step
in the link from genes to physical form. Sociogenomics research is now starting
to focus on dissecting the mechanisms that regulate gene expression and
determine the resulting proteome, and ultimately, the phenotype.
The role of microRNAs and epigenetic
processes, such as DNA methylation and posttranslational histone modification,
in suppressing or activating genes during development has long been recognized
in model organisms such as Drosophila and mice. Such mechanisms may also
regulate caste differentiation and behavioral plasticity in eusocial insects.7 A
functional DNA methylation system appears to operate in eusocial bees, wasps,
ants, and termites, whose genomes encode the key DNA methyltransferases DNMT1
and DNMT3.8 These
methyltransferases tag specific genes with methyl groups, resulting in their
reduced transcription.
Researchers first suspected a role for DNA
methylation in eusocial insects in 2008, when Robert Kucharski of Australian
National University and colleagues used RNA interference (RNAi) to knock down
DNMT3 in honeybee worker larvae, which as adults went on to develop ovaries,
like a queen.9 A
more recent study found that honeybee DNA methylation levels changed with gene
expression during the transition from nursing to foraging, and back again.10 A
similar role for DNA methylation in regulating caste fate has since been
suggested for bumblebees, where chemical inhibition of DNMT3 promotes
reproduction by workers in colonies with no queens.11 These
findings suggest that the role of DNA methylation may be much more dynamic and
unstable in insects than in mammals, changing with age, developmental stage,
and social environment.
The methods, applicability, and
affordability of omics technologies are improving at breakneck speed, giving us
the tools we need to uncover the molecular secrets behind the complex lives of
eusocial insects.
Several lines of evidence now suggest that
histones, the proteins responsible for the tight packaging of DNA into
chromatin, also play important roles in regulating caste-biased gene expression
in eusocial insects. One recent study by Astrid Spannhoff and colleagues at the
University of Texas in Austin identified a histone-regulating protein as a key
ingredient in royal jelly, which worker bees secrete to nourish hive larvae and
to trigger the switch from worker to queen in select larvae as needed.12
Understanding the regulation of gene
transcription is a major piece of the puzzle. But a lot can happen between
transcription and protein production, and a new challenge in sociogenomics is
to connect the dots among transcription, translation, and protein products.
Regulatory elements called microRNAs are known to mediate cell fate and
posttranscriptional gene regulation, and have been found to show caste-specific
expression in honeybees and ants.13,14 However, we still lack a deep
understanding of exactly how microRNAs influence caste and behavior in eusocial
insects.
Natural selection acts on the phenotype, not
directly on genes; the proteome is the closest molecular representation of the
phenotype, and perhaps the key to understanding the evolution of eusociality.
So far, proteomics studies on eusocial insects are few and far between, but
recent large-scale mapping of the proteome of the honeybee worker brain has
revealed proteins that are differentially expressed in nursing and foraging
individuals.15 Researchers
must now begin to embrace cutting-edge bioinformatics methods that allow dual
analysis of transcriptomes and proteomes in the same individuals. A coordinated
analysis of transcription, gene regulation, and protein production, alongside
carefully assayed behavioral repertoires, will bring us closer to understanding
the emergence of social diversity from a single genome.
The future of
sociogenomics
FABIO
BRAMBILLA/WIKIMEDIA COMMONSSociogenomics is young, but the field is
exploding. The methods, applicability, and affordability of omics technologies
are improving at breakneck speed, giving us the tools we need to uncover the
molecular secrets behind the complex lives of eusocial insects. It is now
possible to study any species, and most importantly, to study them in their
natural habitat. This is especially important for studying simple societies,
such as those of stenogastrine hover wasps and allodapine bees, where worker
behavior depends so much on the ecological constraints of the environment.
Understanding the molecular basis of queen
and worker caste formation and maintenance is only the start. The next steps
will focus on what, if any, molecular changes accompanied major transitions in
eusocial evolution, such as workers’ loss of the ability to mate, and the
honeybee queen’s loss of the ability to found a nest on her own. The next few
years will also see the scientific community studying a broader taxonomic
spread, to capture the extent to which molecular processes vary within
different eusocial lineages and across different levels of societal complexity.
Sociogenomics provides an exciting common ground for ecologists, evolutionary
genomicists, and developmental biologists to study broad-scale
macroevolutionary patterns and behaviors in the fine-scale detail of gene
regulation. When disparate disciplines of biology are united, new ideas, new
hypotheses, and a deeper understanding of the natural world invariably emerge.
Claire Asher works in knowledge transfer at the Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research, University College London, and is also a freelance science writer who writes the Curious Meerkat blog (www.curiousmeerkat.co.uk). She recently completed a PhD studying the social and sociogenomic controls of behavior in simple ant societies. Seirian Sumner is a senior lecturer in behavioral biology at the School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol. Her work specializes in exploiting molecular tools to address questions of how and why eusocial behavior evolves.
Claire Asher works in knowledge transfer at the Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research, University College London, and is also a freelance science writer who writes the Curious Meerkat blog (www.curiousmeerkat.co.uk). She recently completed a PhD studying the social and sociogenomic controls of behavior in simple ant societies. Seirian Sumner is a senior lecturer in behavioral biology at the School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol. Her work specializes in exploiting molecular tools to address questions of how and why eusocial behavior evolves.
References
1. G.E. Robinson et al.,
“Sociogenomics: social life in molecular terms,” Nat Rev Genet, 6:257-70, 2005.
2. P.G. Ferreira et al.,
“Transcriptome analyses of primitively eusocial wasps reveal novel insights
into the evolution of sociality and the origin of alternative phenotypes.” Genome Biol, 14:R20, 2013.
3. B.R. Johnson et al.,
“Phylogenomics resolves evolutionary relationships among ants, bees, and
wasps,” Curr Biol, 23:2058-62, 2013.
4. S.H. Woodard et al.,
“Genes involved in convergent evolution of eusociality in bees,” PNAS, 108:7472-77 2011.
5. B.R. Johnson, N.D.
Tsutsui, “Taxonomically restricted genes are associated with the evolution of
sociality in the honey bee,” BMC Genomics, 12:164, 2011.
6. B. Feldmeyer et al.,
“Gene expression patterns associated with caste and reproductive status in
ants: worker-specific genes are more derived than queen-specific ones,” Mol Ecol, 23:151-61, 2014.
7. S. Patalano et al.,
“Shifting behaviour: epigenetic reprogramming in eusocial insects,” Curr Opin Cell Biol, 24:367-73, 2012.
8. H. Yan et al.,
“Eusocial insects as emerging models for behavioural epigenetics,” Nat Rev Genet, 15:677-88, 2014.
9. R. Kucharski et al.,
“Nutritional control of reproductive status in honeybees via DNA methylation,” Science, 319:1827-30, 2008.
10. B.R. Herb et al.,
“Reversible switching between epigenetic states in honeybee behavioral
subcastes,” Nat Neurosci, 15:1371-73, 2012.
11. H.E. Amarasinghe et
al., “Methylation and worker reproduction in the bumble-bee (Bombus
terrestris),” Proc Roy Soc B, 281:20132502, 2014.
12. A. Spannhoff et al.,
“Histone deacetylase inhibitor activity in royal jelly might facilitate caste
switching in bees,” EMBO Rep, 12:238-43, 2011.
13. D.F. Simola et al.,
“Social insect genomes exhibit dramatic evolution in gene composition and
regulation while preserving regulatory features linked to sociality,” Genome Res, 23:1235-47, 2013.
14. J.K. Greenberg et
al., “Behavioral plasticity in honey bees is associated with differences in
brain microRNA transcriptome,” Genes Brain Behav, 11:660-70, 2012.
15. L.G. Hernández et
al., “Worker honeybee brain proteome,” J Proteome Res, 11:1485-93, 2012.
Tags
social insects, social, evolutionary
biology, evolution, eusociality, eusocial insects, behavior and animal behavior
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