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Lifespan behavioural and neural resilience in a social insect

journal contribution
posted on 2022-04-12, 01:37 authored by Ysabel M Giraldo, J Frances Kamhi, Vincent Fourcassié, Mathieu Moreau, Simon RobsonSimon Robson, Adina Rusakov, Lindsey Wimberly, Alexandria Diloreto, Adrianna Kordek, James FA Traniello
Analyses of senescence in social species are important to understanding how group living influences the evolution of ageing in society members. Social insects exhibit remarkable lifespan polyphenisms and division of labour, presenting excellent opportunities to test hypotheses concerning ageing and behaviour. Senescence patterns in other taxa suggest that behavioural per- formance in ageing workers would decrease in association with declining brain functions. Using the ant Pheidole dentata as a model, we found that 120-day-old minor workers, having completed 86% of their laboratory lifespan, showed no decrease in sensorimotor functions underscoring complex tasks such as alloparenting and foraging. Collaterally, we found no age-associated increases in apoptosis in functionally specialized brain compartments or decreases in synaptic densities in the mushroom bodies, regions associa- ted with integrative processing. Furthermore, brain titres of serotonin and dopamine—neuromodulators that could negatively impact behaviour through age-related declines—increased in old workers. Unimpaired task performance appears to be based on the maintenance of brain functions supporting olfaction and motor coordination independent of age. Our study is the first to comprehensively assess lifespan task performance and its neurobiological correlates and identify constancy in behavioural performance and the absence of significant age-related neural declines.

History

Volume

283

Issue

1822

Start Page

1

End Page

9

Number of Pages

9

eISSN

1471-2954

ISSN

0962-8452

Location

England

Publisher

The Royal Society Publishing

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2015-11-25

External Author Affiliations

Boston University, USA; Research Center on Animal Cognition, CNRS, France

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print

Journal

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

Article Number

20152603