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91亚色 U researchers find genetic remix key to evolution of bee behaviour

Worker bees have become a highly skilled and specialized work force because the genes that determine their behaviour are shuffled frequently, helping natural selection to build a better bee, research from 91亚色 suggests.

The聽study, published yesterday in the , sheds light on how worker bees 鈥 who are sterile 鈥 evolved charismatic and cooperative behaviours such as nursing young bees, collecting food for the colony, defending it against intruders and dancing to communicate the location of profitable flowers to nestmates.

California high desert honey bees pollinating a yellow beavertail cactus flower. Photo: Jesse Eastland, Wikimedia Commons

When 91亚色 researchers examined the honey bee genome, they discovered that the genes associated with worker behaviour were found in areas of the genome that have the highest rate of recombination. Recombination represents a shuffling of the genetic deck: recombination in the ovaries of a queen shuffles the chromosomes she inherited from her parents. As a result, the queen鈥檚 female offspring are likely to inherit mosaic chromosomes with different combinations of mutations, says 91亚色 biology Professor Amro Zayed, whose lab conducted the research.

Recombination allows natural selection to act on specific mutations without regard to neighbouring mutations.

91亚色 biology Professor Amro Zayed

鈥淚f I鈥檓 a good rower in a dragon boat with 49 poor rowers, I am going to lose all of my races. 聽But if teams were shuffled after every race, I鈥檒l likely have a better chance of winning. I may even get to be in a boat with 49 good rowers just like myself,鈥 says Zayed. 鈥淭he same thing happens with mutations on a chromosome. 聽Recombination makes the evolutionary fate of mutations independent of their surrounding neighbours, which enhances the process of natural selection.鈥.

The team believes that they have solved one of the mysteries of the honey bee鈥檚 genome, says postdoctoral research associate Clement Kent, lead author on the study.

鈥淭he honey bee has the highest rates of recombination in animals 鈥 ten times higher than humans. 聽Our study shows that this high degree of genetic shuffling has turned on the evolutionary faucet in parts of the bee genome responsible for orchestrating worker behaviour,鈥 says Kent. 聽鈥淭his can allow natural selection to increase the fitness of honey bee colonies, which live or die based on how well their workers 鈥榖ehave鈥.鈥

The study, 鈥淩ecombination is associated with the evolution of genome structure and worker behavior in honey bees鈥 was coauthored by Kent, Zayed, and graduate students Shermineh Minaei and Brock Harpur. The research was funded by the and the Province of Ontario.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.