4.5 Article

Flight restriction prevents associative learning deficits but not changes in brain protein-adduct formation during honeybee ageing

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 214, Issue 8, Pages 1322-1332

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.049155

Keywords

senescence; foraging activity; gustatory responsiveness; proboscis extension response; olfactory conditioning; malondialdehyde; ubiquitin; oxidative stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [175413, 180504, 185306, 191699]
  2. National Institute on Aging [NIA P01 AG22500]
  3. PEW Charitable Trust

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Honeybees (Apis mellifera) senesce within 2 weeks after they discontinue nest tasks in favour of foraging. Foraging involves metabolically demanding flight, which in houseflies (Musca domestica) and fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) is associated with markers of ageing such as increased mortality and accumulation of oxidative damage. The role of flight in honeybee ageing is incompletely understood. We assessed relationships between honeybee flight activity and ageing by simulating rain that confined foragers to their colonies most of the day. After 15 days on average, flight-restricted foragers were compared with bees with normal (free) flight: one group that foraged for similar to 15 days and two additional control groups, for flight duration and chronological age, that foraged for similar to 5 days. Free flight over 15 days on average resulted in impaired associative learning ability. In contrast, flight-restricted foragers did as well in learning as bees that foraged for 5 days on average. This negative effect of flight activity was not influenced by chronological age or gustatory responsiveness, a measure of the bees' motivation to learn. Contrasting their intact learning ability, flight-restricted bees accrued the most oxidative brain damage as indicated by malondialdehyde protein adduct levels in crude cytosolic fractions. Concentrations of mono- and poly-ubiquitinated brain proteins were equal between the groups, whereas differences in total protein amounts suggested changes in brain protein metabolism connected to forager age, but not flight. We propose that intense flight is causal to brain deficits in aged bees, and that oxidative protein damage is unlikely to be the underlying mechanism.

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