Abstract

All organisms need to balance processes that consume energy against those that produce energy. With an increase in biological complexity over evolutionary time, regulation of this balance has become much more complex, resulting in specialization of metabolic tasks between organelles, cells, organs and, in the case of eusocial organisms, between the individuals that comprise the 'superorganism'. Exemplifying this, nurse honey bees maintain high abdominal lipids, while foragers have very low lipid stores, likely contributing to efficient performance of their social role, and thus to colony fitness. The proximate mechanisms responsible for these metabolic differences remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the effects of age, worker class and dietary macronutrients on the abdominal activity of fatty acid synthase (FAS), the enzyme responsible for de novo synthesis of fatty acids, as well as the effects of age on lipase activity, enzymes responsible for the breakdown of stored lipids. We found that FAS but not lipase activity declines as bees age past peak nursing age. Feeding both nurses and foragers carbohydrates increased FAS activity compared with starved bees, but, whether fed or starved, nurses had much higher FAS activity than similarly treated foragers, implicating reduced lipid synthesis as one component of foragers' low lipid stores. Finally, we used artificial diets with different amounts of protein and fat to precociously induce low, forager-like FAS activity levels in nurse-age bees deprived of protein. We speculate that reduced protein appetite and consumption during the nurse-forager transition is responsible for suppressed lipid synthesis in foragers.

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