Plastic brain structure changes associated with the division of labor and aging in termites

Author:

Ishibashi Tomoki12ORCID,Waliullah A.S.M.3ORCID,Aramaki Shuhei345,Kamiya Masaki5,Kahyo Tomoaki34,Nakamura Katsumasa5,Tasaki Eisuke1ORCID,Takata Mamoru1,Setou Mitsutoshi346,Matsuura Kenji1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Insect Ecology Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

2. Laboratory for Physical Biology RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research Kobe Japan

3. Department of Cellular and Molecular Anatomy Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Shizuoka Japan

4. International Mass Imaging Center, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Shizuoka Japan

5. Department of Radiology Hamamatsu University Hospital Shizuoka Japan

6. Department of Systems Molecular Anatomy Institute for Medical Photonics Research, Preeminent Medical Photonics Education and Research Center, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Shizuoka Japan

Abstract

AbstractDivision of labor is a prominent feature of social insect societies, where different castes engage in different specialized tasks. As brain differences are associated with behavioral differences, brain anatomy may be linked to caste polymorphism. Here, we show that termite brain morphology changes markedly with caste differentiation and age in the termite, Reticulitermes speratus. Brain morphology was shown to be associated with reproductive division of labor, with reproductive individuals (alates and neotenic reproductives) having larger brains than nonreproductives (workers and soldiers). Micro‐computed tomography (CT) imaging and dissection observations showed that the king's brain morphology changed markedly with shrinkage of the optic lobes during their long life in the dark. Behavioral experiments showed that mature primary kings lose visual function as a result of optic lobe shrinkage. These results suggested that termites restructure their nervous systems to perform necessary tasks as they undergo caste differentiation, and that they also show flexible changes in brain morphology even after the final molt. This study showed that brain morphology in social insects is linked to caste and aging, and that the evolution of the division of labor is underpinned by the development of diverse neural systems for specialized tasks.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology

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