There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Plasticity of Dufour's gland secretion in the honey bee is correlated with the individual's
plasticity. Queens and queenless (QL) egg-laying workers possess a bouquet of esters
and hydrocarbons, whereas queenright (QR) workers produce exclusively hydrocarbons.
The effects of social environment (QR vs. QL conditions) and possible physiological
constraints on the gland were studied by following the biosynthesis of these classes
of compounds in vivo and in vitro. Biosynthesis in vivo followed the prediction based
on glandular chemistry. Queens and QL egg-laying workers, but not QR workers or QL
foragers, showed incorporation of sodium acetate into both hydrocarbons and esters.
In contrast, the in vitro studies revealed that, in addition to queens and QL egg-laying
workers, QR nurses retained their ability to produce the queen characteristic esters.
Although there was some ester production in foragers, it occurred to a lesser extent.
It is possible that the glands in the older foragers undergo irreversible changes.
The in vitro incubation also revealed a temporal activation of ester biosynthesis
in QR workers. In these glands alcohols, corresponding to the alcohol moiety of the
esters, predominated in short-term incubations but decreased as the amount of newly
synthesized esters increased. In contrast, queens and QL egg-laying workers showed
predominant incorporation into esters from the onset of incubation. Thus, expression
within the workers' Dufour's gland is regulated. In the presence of a queen, ester
production is inhibited. Once the queen is removed the physiologically unconstrained
gland starts to biosynthesize the queen-specific esters after a certain lag needed
for the build-up of precursors and the enzymatic machinery.