Identification of Multiple Loci Associated with Social Parasitism in Honeybees

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Abstract

In colonies of the honeybee Apis mellifera, the queen is usually the only reproductive female, which produces new females (queens and workers) by laying fertilized eggs. However, in one subspecies of A. mellifera, known as the Cape bee (A. m. capensis), worker bees reproduce asexually by thelytoky, an abnormal form of meiosis where two daughter nucleii fuse to form single diploid eggs, which develop into females without being fertilized. The Cape bee also exhibits a suite of phenotypes that facilitate social parasitism whereby workers lay such eggs in foreign colonies so their offspring can exploit their resources. The genetic basis of this switch to social parasitism in the Cape bee is unknown. To address this, we compared genome variation in a sample of Cape bees with other African populations. We find genetic divergence between these populations to be very low on average but identify several regions of the genome with extreme differentiation. The regions are strongly enriched for signals of selection in Cape bees, indicating that increased levels of positive selection have produced the unique set of derived phenotypic traits in this subspecies. Genetic variation within these regions allows unambiguous genetic identification of Cape bees and likely underlies the genetic basis of social parasitism. The candidate loci include genes involved in ecdysteroid signaling and juvenile hormone and dopamine biosynthesis, which may regulate worker ovary activation and others whose products localize at the centrosome and are implicated in chromosomal segregation during meiosis. Functional analysis of these loci will yield insights into the processes of reproduction and chemical signaling in both parasitic and non-parasitic populations and advance understanding of the process of normal and atypical meiosis.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Geographical location of population samples. The thelytokous and parasitic Cape bee Apis mellifera capensis (lower ellipse) inhabits the Fynbos ecoregion (green) of South Africa. It was sampled from the western Fynbos (Stellenbosch, Cape Town; black circle) and eastern Fynbos (near Kragga Kamma Game Park, Port Elizabeth; white circle) and compared to two arrhenotokous and non-parasitic African populations (upper dashed ellipse). A.m. scutellata is widespread throughout of the Central Plateau and was sampled in the Pretoria region (yellow circle). A transitional zone with mixed phenotypes exists between the two subspecies (blue region). A.m. adansonii bees (pink) were sampled in Kaduna state, Nigeria (outside map). The schematic triangle specify the genome-wide levels of divergence between the three populations (FST estimator of Reynolds et al. [104]).
  • Fig 2. Selection signals are stronger in the Cape bees than any of the other two subspecies. The fixation index (FST), Population Branch Statistic (PBS) and Cross-Population Extended Haplotype Homozygosity (XP-EHH) were computed for every SNP segregating between each African subspecies and a combined population consisting of the two remaining subspecies. (A) The structure of the three experiments. The main FST value was computed between each subspecies and the combined population (dashed line; population 1 (n = 10) and 2 (n = 20); FST1 !2) for every SNP. FST1 !2 was also estimated across 1kbp windows and between each population and a distantly related European outgroup (grey dashed lines; FST1 !3 and FST2 !3) in order to estimate the local PBS associated with every SNP. The first figure represents the main scan, i.e. comparing the Cape bees against the other African and European bees (black). The middle figure compares scutellata against the other bees (pink). The last figure compares adansonii against the other bees (blue). (B) The number of SNPs counted for FST bins of 0.05 for each comparison. Colors as in (A). (C) The mean PBS value for every FST bin of 0.05. Positive values identify divergence associated with population 1. Outlier variants with FST>0.8 are most strongly biased towards divergence in population 1 when the Cape bees are taken as this population. 95% confidence intervals were computed from 200 bootstrap replicates. Colors as in (A). Data points and confidence intervals plotted for bins with at least 10 SNPs. (D) The mean XP-EHH value for every FST bin of 0.05. Positive values identify long haplotypes in population 1 relative to population 2, whereas negative values represent the opposite. Outlier variants with FST>0.8 are most strongly biased towards long haplotypes in population 1 when the Cape bees are taken as this population. 95% confidence intervals were computed from 200 bootstrap replicates. Colors as in (A). Data points and confidence intervals plotted for bins with at least 10 SNPs.
  • Fig 3. A genome-wide scan for selection identifies several candidate loci in the Cape bee genome. Selection statistics associated with every SNP segregating between the Cape bees (A.m. capensis) and the African background population (scutellata + adansonii) (n = 6.2×106). (A) The Fixation index (FST). Dark blue line is FST across 100kbp non-overlapping windows. Green lines are the 99.99% percentile (solid line; FST>0.44; n = 624), the 99.9% percentile (dashed line; FST>0.80; n = 6245) and the 99.5% percentile (dotted line; FST>0.24; n = 31,226). Highlighted in light blue are all SNPs associated with the 12 candidate
  • Table 1. Gene candidates in the vicinity of selection signals.
  • Table 2. Characteristics of sweep regions containing gene candidates.

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APA

Wallberg, A., Pirk, C. W., Allsopp, M. H., & Webster, M. T. (2016). Identification of Multiple Loci Associated with Social Parasitism in Honeybees. PLoS Genetics, 12(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006097

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