Chromatin accessibility-based characterisation of brain gene regulatory networks in three distinct honey bee polyphenisms

Author:

Lowe Robert1ORCID,Wojciechowski Marek2ORCID,Ellis Nancy2ORCID,Hurd Paul J2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. RER Consultants, 28 Worbeck Road ,  London  SE20 7SW, UK

2. School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences, Queen Mary University of London , Mile End Road , London E1 4NS, UK

Abstract

Abstract The honey bee genome has the capacity to produce three phenotypically distinct organisms (two diploid female castes: queen and worker, and a haploid male drone). Previous studies have implicated metabolic flux acting via epigenetic regulation in directing nutrition-driven phenotypic plasticity in the honey bee. However, the cis-acting DNA regulatory elements that establish tissue and polyphenism -specific epigenomes and gene expression programmes, remain unclear. Using a high resolution multiomic approach including assay for transposase-accessible chromatin by sequencing (ATAC-seq), RNA-seq and ChIP-seq, we produce the first genome-wide maps of the regulatory landscape across all three adult honey bee phenotypes identifying > 5000 regulatory regions in queen, 7500 in worker and 6500 in drone, with the vast majority of these sites located within intronic regions. These regions are defined by positive enrichment of H3K27ac and depletion of H3K4me3 and show a positive correlation with gene expression. Using ATAC-seq footprinting we determine queen, worker and drone -specific transcription factor occupancy and uncover novel phenotype-specific regulatory networks identifying two key nuclear receptors that have previously been implicated in caste-determination and adult behavioural maturation in honey bees; ecdysone receptor and ultraspiracle. Collectively, this study provides novel insights into key gene regulatory networks that are associated with these distinct polyphenisms in the honey bee.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

William Harvey International Translational Research Academy

Queen Mary University of London

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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