Abstract

The honeybee is a haplodiploid organism in which sexual development is determined by the complementary sex determiner (csd) gene and realized by sex-specific splicing processes involving the feminizer (fem) gene. We used high throughput transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) to characterize the transcriptional differences between the sexes caused by the fertilization and sex determination processes in honeybee (Apis mellifera) embryos. We identified 758, 372 and 43 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and 58, 176 and 233 differentially spliced genes (DSGs) in 10-15-h-old, 25-40-h-old and 55-70-h-old female and male embryos, respectively. The early difference in male and female embryos in response to the fertilization and non-fertilization processes resulted mainly in differential expression of genes (758 DEGs vs. 58 DSGs). In the latest sampled embryonic stage, the transcriptional differences between the sexes were dominated by alternative splicing of transcripts (43 DEGs vs. 233 DSGs). Interestingly, differentially spliced transcripts that encode RNA-binding properties were overrepresented in 55-70-h-old embryos, indicating a more diverse regulation via alternative splicing than previous work on the sex determination pathway suggested. These stage- and sex-specific transcriptome data from honeybee embryos provide a comprehensive resource for examining the roles of fertilization and sex determination in developmental programming in a haplodiploid system.

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