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Article Abstract

Pheromone communication is the cornerstone of eusocial insect societies since it mediates the social hierarchy, division of labor, and concerted activities of colony members. The current knowledge on molecular mechanisms of social insect pheromone detection by odorant receptors (ORs) is limited to bees and ants, while no OR was yet functionally characterized in termites, the oldest eusocial insect clade. Here, we present the first OR deorphanization in termites. We selected four OR sequences from the annotated antennal transcriptome of the termite (Psammotermitidae), expressed them in Empty Neuron , and functionally characterized them using single sensillum recording (SSR). For one of the selected ORs, PsimOR14, we obtained strong responses to the main component of trail-following pheromone, the monocyclic diterpene neocembrene. PsimOR14 showed a narrow tuning to neocembrene with only one additional compound out of 67 tested generating non-negligible responses. We report on homology-based modeling and molecular dynamics simulations of ligand binding by PsimOR14. Subsequently, we used SSR in workers and identified the olfactory sensillum responding to neocembrene, thus likely expressing . Finally, we demonstrate that is significantly more expressed in worker antennae compared to soldiers, which correlates with higher sensitivity of workers to neocembrene.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12364489PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.101814DOI Listing

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Pheromone communication is the cornerstone of eusocial insect societies since it mediates the social hierarchy, division of labor, and concerted activities of colony members. The current knowledge on molecular mechanisms of social insect pheromone detection by odorant receptors (ORs) is limited to bees and ants, while no OR was yet functionally characterized in termites, the oldest eusocial insect clade. Here, we present the first OR deorphanization in termites.

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