Abstract

The traits of two subspecies of western honey bees, Apis mellifera scutellata and A.m. capensis, endemic to the Republic of South Africa (RSA), are of biological and commercial relevance. Nevertheless, the genetic basis of important phenotypes found in these subspecies remains poorly understood. We performed a genome wide association study on three traits of biological relevance in 234 A.m. capensis, 73 A.m. scutellata and 158 hybrid individuals. Thirteen markers were significantly associated to at least one trait (P ≤ 4.28 × 10-6): one for ovariole number, four for scutellar plate and eight for tergite color. We discovered two possible causative variants associated to the respective phenotypes: a deletion in GB46429 or Ebony (NC_007070.3:g.14101325G>del) (R69Efs*85) and a nonsense on GB54634 (NC_007076.3:g.4492792A>G;p.Tyr128*) causing a premature stop, substantially shortening the predicted protein. The mutant genotypes are significantly associated to phenotypes in A.m. capensis. Loss-of-function of Ebony can cause accumulation of circulating dopamine, and increased dopamine levels correlate to ovary development in queenless workers and pheromone production. Allelic association (P = 1.824 x 10-5) of NC_007076.3:g.4492792A>G;p.Tyr128* to ovariole number warrants further investigation into function and expression of the GB54634 gene. Our results highlight genetic components of relevant production/conservation behavioral phenotypes in honey bees.

Highlights

  • Modern western honey bees (Apis mellifera) show substantial genetic and phenotypic variation across their extensive geographic range [1]

  • The genome wide association study (GWAS) resulted in significant associations to markers on chromosomes LG1, LG2, LG7, LG9 and LG10

  • A deletion identified by the Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS) pipeline in GB46429 (NC_007070.3: g.14101325G>del) (R69Efs 85) leads to an early stop codon and truncates the normal amino acid sequence from the predicted 860aa to only 85 amino acids

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Summary

Introduction

Modern western honey bees (Apis mellifera) show substantial genetic and phenotypic variation across their extensive geographic range [1]. They occur naturally in Europe, the Middle East, western Asia, and Africa, where the species is composed of between 25–35 subspecies [2,3,4]. Individual genotype data are available through Dryad Digital Repository (https://doi.org/10.5061/ dryad.98jh446)

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