An inhibitory signal associated with danger reduces honeybee dopamine levels | |
Dong, Shihao; Gu, Gaoying1; Lin, Tao; Wang, Ziqi1; Li, Jianjun; Tan, Ken![]() | |
2023 | |
Source Publication | CURRENT BIOLOGY
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ISSN | 0960-9822 |
Volume | 33Issue:10Pages:- |
Abstract | Positive and negative experiences can alter animal brain dopamine levels.1 When first arriving at a rewarding food source or beginning to waggle dance and recruit nestmates to food, honeybees have increased brain dopamine levels, indicating a desire for food.2 We provide the first evidence that an inhibitory signal, the stop signal, which counters waggle dancing and is triggered by negative events at the food source, can decrease head dopamine levels and dancing, independent of the dancer having any negative experiences. The hedonic value of food can therefore be depressed simply by the receipt of an inhibitory signal. Increasing the brain dopamine levels reduced the aversive effects of an attack, increasing the time that bees spent sub-sequently feeding and waggle dancing and decreasing their stop signaling and time spent in the hive. Because honeybees regulate food recruitment and its inhibition at the colony level, these results highlight the complex integration of colony information with a basic and highly conserved neural mechanism in mam-mals and insects.2 |
Subject Area | Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ; Biology ; Cell Biology |
DOI | 10.1016/j.cub.2023.03.072 |
Indexed By | SCI |
Language | 英语 |
WOS ID | WOS:001008947100001 |
Citation statistics | |
Document Type | 期刊论文 |
Identifier | https://ir.xtbg.ac.cn/handle/353005/13637 |
Collection | 2012年后新成立研究组 |
Affiliation | 1.Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Key Lab Trop Forest Ecol, Xishuangbanna Trop Bot Garden, Kunming 650000, Yunnan, Peoples R China 2.Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China 3.Nieh, James C.] Univ Calif La Jolla, Sch Biol Sci, Dept Ecol Behav & Evolut, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA |
Recommended Citation GB/T 7714 | Dong, Shihao,Gu, Gaoying,Lin, Tao,et al. An inhibitory signal associated with danger reduces honeybee dopamine levels[J]. CURRENT BIOLOGY,2023,33(10):-. |
APA | Dong, Shihao.,Gu, Gaoying.,Lin, Tao.,Wang, Ziqi.,Li, Jianjun.,...&Nieh, James C..(2023).An inhibitory signal associated with danger reduces honeybee dopamine levels.CURRENT BIOLOGY,33(10),-. |
MLA | Dong, Shihao,et al."An inhibitory signal associated with danger reduces honeybee dopamine levels".CURRENT BIOLOGY 33.10(2023):-. |
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