Insects (Jan 2022)

Understanding of Waggle Dance in the Honey Bee (<i>Apis mellifera</i>) from the Perspective of Long Non-Coding RNA

  • Wangjiang Feng,
  • Jingnan Huang,
  • Zhaonan Zhang,
  • Hongyi Nie,
  • Yan Lin,
  • Zhiguo Li,
  • Songkun Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13020111
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 111

Abstract

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The ethological study of dance behaviour has yielded some findings since Karl Von Frisch discovered and interpreted the ‘dance language’ in the honey bee. However, the function and role of long non-coding RNAs on dance behaviour are hardly known until now. In this study, the differential expression patterns of lncRNAs in the brains of waggling dancers and non-dancing bees were analysed by RNA sequencing. Furthermore, lncRNA-mRNA association analysis was constructed to decipher the waggle dance. The results of RNA sequencing indicated that a total of 2877 lncRNAs and 9647 mRNAs were detected from honey bee brains. Further comparison analysis displayed that two lncRNAs, MSTRG.6803.3 and XR_003305156.1, may be involved in the waggle dance. The lncRNA-mRNA association analysis showed that target genes of differentially expressed lncRNAs in the brains between waggling dancers and non-dancing bees were mainly annotated in biological processes related to metabolic process, signalling and response to stimulus and in molecular function associated with signal transducer activity, molecular transducer activity and binding. Nitrogen metabolism was likely implicated in the modulation of the waggle dance. Our findings contribute to further understanding the occurrence and development of waggle dance.

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