Linked expression of genes associated with the circadian clock and
behavioral plasticity in two ant species
- Biplabendu Das,
- Deborah Gordon
Abstract
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The expression of circadian clock genes shifts with changes in behavior.
We examined the association of clock genes and those associated with
behavioral plasticity in the diurnal, desert harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex
barbatus and in a distantly related, tropical nocturnal species,
Camponotus floridanus. A comparison of daily transcriptome in light-dark
(LD) and total dark (DD) of ants in a laboratory colony of P. barbatus
showed that most genes were expressed in both LD and DD at about the
same level, while 460 genes were expressed only in LD, including many
associated with olfaction and juvenile hormone signaling. Network
analysis identified eleven modules of co-expressed genes under LD
conditions; one module (C2) contained most of the clock-controlled genes
that show circadian expression in both LD and DD, including Period and
Clock. The clock-controlled genes in module C2, and in another
neighboring module (C1) with circadian rhythms in DD only, showed
significant overlap with those found in previous work to be associated
in P. barbatus with plasticity in the regulation of foraging activity to
manage water loss. The set of genes expressed in the ant brains with 24h
rhythms were similar in P. barbatus and C. floridanus. The P. barbatus
modules C2 and C1 showed a strong overlap with C. floridanus genes
previously shown to differ in their periodicity of daily rhythms in
nurses and foragers. The results suggest that genes associated with both
circadian clock and behavioral plasticity may be broadly conserved in
ants.01 Oct 2024Submitted to Molecular Ecology 08 Oct 2024Submission Checks Completed
08 Oct 2024Assigned to Editor
08 Oct 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
30 Oct 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned