Abstract

Glycogen and trehalose are important sources of energy in insects. The expression of genes encoding the key metabolic enzymes—glycogen synthase (GS), glycogen phosphorylase (GP), trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (TPS-1), soluble trehalase (Tre-1) and membrane-bound trehalase (Tre-2)—was analyzed in 12 developmental stages of Apis mellifera worker brood. The content of GS and GP proteins, TPS activity, total trehalase activity, and the activity of Tre-1 and Tre-2 were determined. Transcript quantity was not always correlated with the content of the encoded GS or GP protein. The correlation was higher for GS (r = 0.797) than GP (r = 0.651). The expression of the glycogen synthase gene (gs) and the glycogen phosphorylase gene (gp) was high in 4- and 7-day-old larvae and in pupae, excluding the last pupal stage. The expression of the tps-1 gene was highest in the mid-pupal stage and contributed to higher enzyme activity in that stage. The expression of the tre-1 gene was higher than the expression of the tre-2 gene throughout development. In newly hatched workers, the expression of genes encoding catabolic enzymes of both carbohydrates, gp and tre-1, was higher than the expression of genes encoding anabolic enzymes. The results of this study suggest that sugar metabolism genes have somewhat different control mechanisms during larval development and metamorphosis.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHoneybee (Apis mellifera) development consists of four phases: egg, larval, pupal and adult

  • Like other holometabolic insects, honeybee (Apis mellifera) development consists of four phases: egg, larval, pupal and adult

  • We studied the sugar metabolism only by analysis of the content of carbohydrates and the activities of their degradation enzymes during the honeybee development (Żółtowska et al 2012; Farjan et al 2015), but there is lack of knowledge about developmental changes in the enzymes’ activity (GS and TPS) that synthesize the key carbohydrates in the brood of honeybees

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Summary

Introduction

Honeybee (Apis mellifera) development consists of four phases: egg, larval, pupal and adult. The development of honeybee brood may be divided into two periods: in uncapped and in capped cells (from 8–9 days to adult emergence). The maintenance of energy homeostasis is the prerequisite for survival in all living organisms. Glucose is a universal source of energy for most organisms. Glucose can be derived from food or endogenous metabolic processes such as gluconeogenesis or breakdown of storage carbohydrates as glycogen and trehalose. A polymer of many glucose residues, is a common storage polysaccharide in all animals.

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