学位论文详细信息
Transcriptional response to spatial learning and foraging in honey bees: molecular bases for adult neuroplasticity
Honey bees;mushroom bodies;gene expression;neuroplasticity
Lutz, Claudia
关键词: Honey bees;    mushroom bodies;    gene expression;    neuroplasticity;   
Others  :  https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/42153/Claudia_Lutz.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
美国|英语
来源: The Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship
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【 摘 要 】

An important goal of neuroscience research is to discover molecular processes that enable persistent neuroplasticity in the adult and aging brain. In many species, some types of neuroplasticity typically decrease with age. Honey bees and other social hymenopterans, however, exhibit a reinstatement of structural plasticity in association with flight and foraging behavior. Adult plasticity in these species often includes growth and remodeling of processes in the mushroom bodies, a paired region of the insect brain involved in sensory integration, learning and memory. Honey bees (Apis mellifera) learn to navigate in the environment surrounding the hive by performing orientation flights for several days before they begin to forage; both orientation flights and foraging are cognitively challenging behaviors. Honey bee mushroom bodies show increases in neuropil volume coincident with the increased cognitive demands of orientation flights and foraging behavior, and treatment with pilocarpine, a muscarinic cholinergic receptor agonist, produces growth of the mushroom body neuropil comparable to that produced by maturation and foraging. I have examined molecular processes associated with flight and foraging experience in the mushroom bodies of honey bees to discover mechanisms that may support neuropil growth. Foraging experience regulates multiple molecular processes in the mushroom bodies, including some that may contribute directly to neuropil growth, and others that could potentially protect the brain from the effects of aging and physiological stress. My investigation of a specific behavior, the orientation flight, found that this experience triggers a rapid and transient upregulation of egr in the mushroom bodies. Egr is a homolog of egr-1, an immediate-early gene well known to respond to novel experience that also exhibits higher basal levels in brain regions undergoing development or remodeling in vertebrates. I found that egr expression was upregulated in bees prepared to perform orientation flights and in foragers relative to hive bees engaged in brood care, and established its plausibility as a link between muscarinic signaling and neuropil growth.

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