Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BRAIN (Bacterial regulation of Apis neurophysiology)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2018-07-01 do 2020-06-30
This project aimed to achieve a first characterization of the effects of the gut microbiota on the brain physiology and social behaviour of the honey bee, a social insect for which the gut microbiota is well-characterized and experimental protocols to produce microbiota-depleted bees and bees harbouring any desired combination of gut microbes have previously been established. The gut microbiota – brain axis has drawn tremendous amounts of scientific and lay-public attention in recent years as an increasing number of studies are pinpointing microbial roles in neurodegenerative diseases and behavioural dysfunction. However, an integrated approach to unravel the proximate mechanisms of host-brain-symbiont interaction had not yet been pursued in social insects, whose complex social behaviours are second only to human behaviours.
The analyses of these large RNA-sequencing (involving 160 samples) and CHC datasets demonstrated for the first time that the gut bacterial community affects the physiology of the brain in a eusocial animal, without changing the CHC profiles that social insects use to recognize their nestmates and project their fertility status. Our results produced a short list of candidates for further functional studies into the proximate mechanisms of host-brain-symbiont interactions. They also highlighted that the brain region most affected by the gut microbiota was the one involved in the perception of olfactory and gustatory stimuli. The candidate genes include several with known involvement in brain development in other organisms, and the functional categories to which they belong show some overlap with those associated with the gut microbiota – brain axis of vertebrate models. We further developed an automated behavioural tracking approach to investigate the social behavioural phenotypes of the bees while keeping them in a microbiota-depleted state, which allowed us to assess the effects of the gut microbiota on the honey bee social network structure. These large datasets have been successfully collected, and the analyses are ongoing and will be finalized in the next few months.
As part of this project, a review on the gut microbiota – brain axis of insects was published in Current Opinion in Insect Science.