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A Search for Parent-of-Origin Effects on Honey Bee Gene Expression

Parent-specific gene expression (PSGE) is little known outside of mammals and plants. PSGE occurs when the expression level of a gene depends on whether an allele was inherited from the mother or the father. Kin selection theory predicts that there should be extensive PSGE in social insects because social insect parents can gain inclusive fitness benefits by silencing parental alleles in female offspring. We searched for evidence of PSGE in honey bees using transcriptomes from reciprocal crosses between European and Africanized strains.

Sarah D. Kocher, Jennifer M. Tsuruda, Joshua D. Gibson, Christine M. Emore, Miguel E. Arechavaleta-Velasco, David C. Queller, Joan E. Strassmann, Christina M. Grozinger, Michael R. Gribskov, Phillip San Miguel, Rick Westerman and Greg J. Hunt

 

Abstract

Parent-specific gene expression (PSGE) is little known outside of mammals and plants. PSGE occurs when the expression level of a gene depends on whether an allele was inherited from the mother or the father. Kin selection theory predicts that there should be extensive PSGE in social insects because social insect parents can gain inclusive fitness benefits by silencing parental alleles in female offspring. We searched for evidence of PSGE in honey bees using transcriptomes from reciprocal crosses between European and Africanized strains. We found 46 transcripts with significant parent-of-origin effects on gene expression, many of which overexpressed the maternal allele. Interestingly, we also found a large proportion of genes showing a bias toward maternal alleles in only one of the reciprocal crosses. These results indicate that PSGE may occur in social insects. The nonreciprocal effects could be largely driven by hybrid incompatibility between these strains. Future work will help to determine if these are indeed parent-of-origin effects that can modulate inclusive fitness benefits.

 

See: http://www.g3journal.org/content/5/8/1657.abstract?etoc

G3 August 1, 2015 vol. 5 no. 8 1657-1662

Genes, Genomes, Genetics

 

Figure 3  Parent-of-origin effects on gene expression. A heatmap of the 46 parentally biased transcripts demonstrates that reciprocal crosses have somewhat consistent patterns of parental bias across developmental and behavioral states. Each line represents a cufflinks-predicted transcript with a significant parent-of-origin effect on gene expression. Parental bias for each significant transcript is shown for larvae, adults, and brains. AE: cross between Africanized queen and European-derived drone. EA: the reciprocal cross. Numbers under each cross denote replicates. Blues represent a paternal bias; reds represent maternal biases. *The locus was confirmed with validation datasets. §The locus was tested, but the bias was not confirmed. See Table S1 for detailed results.

 

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