Developmental transcriptomes predict adult social behaviours in the socially flexible sweat bee, Lasioglossum baleicum
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Published:2023-12-18
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ISSN:0962-1083
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Container-title:Molecular Ecology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Molecular Ecology
Author:
Omufwoko Kennedy S.12ORCID,
Cronin Adam L.3ORCID,
Nguyen Thi Thu Ha3,
Webb Andrew E.124ORCID,
Traniello Ian M.12,
Kocher Sarah D.124ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA
2. Lewis‐Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA
3. Department of Biological Sciences Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan
4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA
Abstract
AbstractNatural variation can provide important insights into the genetic and environmental factors that shape social behaviour and its evolution. The sweat bee, Lasioglossum baleicum, is a socially flexible bee capable of producing both solitary and eusocial nests. We demonstrate that within a single nesting aggregation, soil temperatures are a strong predictor of the social structure of nests. Sites with warmer temperatures in the spring have a higher frequency of social nests than cooler sites, perhaps because warmer temperatures provide a longer reproductive window for those nests. To identify the molecular correlates of this behavioural variation, we generated a de novo genome assembly for L. baleicum, and we used transcriptomic profiling to compare adults and developing offspring from eusocial and solitary nests. We find that adult, reproductive females have similar expression profiles regardless of social structure in the nest, but that there are strong differences between reproductive females and workers from social nests. We also find substantial differences in the transcriptomic profiles of stage‐matched pupae from warmer, social‐biased sites compared to cooler, solitary‐biased sites. These transcriptional differences are strongly predictive of adult reproductive state, suggesting that the developmental environment may set the stage for adult behaviours in L. baleicum. Together, our results help to characterize the molecular mechanisms shaping variation in social behaviour and highlight a potential role of environmental tuning during development as a factor shaping adult behaviour and physiology in this socially flexible bee.
Funder
Common Fund
David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Division of Environmental Biology
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Princeton University
Society for the Study of Evolution
Subject
Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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