@article{79260800feb94f31aa682c896d95d3dd,
title = "The Neuropeptide Corazonin Controls Social Behavior and Caste Identity in Ants",
abstract = "Social insects are emerging models to study how gene regulation affects behavior because their colonies comprise individuals with the same genomes but greatly different behavioral repertoires. To investigate the molecular mechanisms that activate distinct behaviors in different castes, we exploit a natural behavioral plasticity in Harpegnathos saltator, where adult workers can transition to a reproductive, queen-like state called gamergate. Analysis of brain transcriptomes during the transition reveals that corazonin, a neuropeptide homologous to the vertebrate gonadotropin-releasing hormone, is downregulated as workers become gamergates. Corazonin is also preferentially expressed in workers and/or foragers from other social insect species. Injection of corazonin in transitioning Harpegnathos individuals suppresses expression of vitellogenin in the brain and stimulates worker-like hunting behaviors, while inhibiting gamergate behaviors, such as dueling and egg deposition. We propose that corazonin is a central regulator of caste identity and behavior in social insects.",
keywords = "ants, brain, corazonin, epigenetics, foraging, gene regulation, neuropeptides, social behavior, transcriptomes, vitellogenin",
author = "Janko Gospocic and Shields, {Emily J.} and Glastad, {Karl M.} and Yanping Lin and Penick, {Clint A.} and Hua Yan and Mikheyev, {Alexander S.} and Linksvayer, {Timothy A.} and Garcia, {Benjamin A.} and Berger, {Shelley L.} and J{\"u}rgen Liebig and Danny Reinberg and Roberto Bonasio",
note = "Funding Information: The authors thank Cristina Brady, Timothy Christopher, Capucine Le Meur, Maria-Isabel Navarro Sanchez, Julian Roessler, Jordan Bednarzi, and Emma Vales for their technical support; Michael Warner for Mononomorium RNA-seq; and Claude Desplan, Cornelius Gross, Anandasankar Ray, and Larry Zwiebel for comments on the manuscript. R.B. acknowledges support from the NIH (DP2MH107055), the Searle Scholars Program (15-SSP-102), the March of Dimes Foundation (1-FY-15-344), a Linda Pechenik Montague Investigator Award, and the Charles E. Kaufman Foundation (KA2016-85223). E.J.S. acknowledges financial support from the NIH (T32HG000046). The ant projects in the laboratories of S.L.B., D.R., and J.L. were funded by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Collaborative Innovation Award (#2009005). T.A.L. was supported by an NSF award (IOS-1452520). H.Y. was supported by the NIH F32 postdoctoral fellowship (F32AG044971). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2017 Elsevier Inc.",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1016/j.cell.2017.07.014",
language = "English",
volume = "170",
pages = "748--759.e12",
journal = "Cell",
issn = "0092-8674",
number = "4",
}