Publication | Open Access
Carbohydrate metabolism genes and pathways in insects: insights from the honey bee genome
168
Citations
54
References
2006
Year
GeneticsEntomologyMetabolomic ProfilingSocial InsectCarbohydrate Metabolism GenesHoney BeeBiosynthesisMetabolic Pathway AnalysisDietary MetabolitesPublic HealthMetabolic SignalingHuman MetabolismMetabolic InteractionsHoney Bee GenomeBiochemistryPlant-insect InteractionMetabolomicsPlant MetabolismBiologyCarbohydrate MetabolismMetabolic ProfilingMetabolismMedicinePlant BiochemistryLipid Synthesis
Abstract Carbohydrate‐metabolizing enzymes may have particularly interesting roles in the honey bee, Apis mellifera , because this social insect has an extremely carbohydrate‐rich diet, and nutrition plays important roles in caste determination and socially mediated behavioural plasticity. We annotated a total of 174 genes encoding carbohydrate‐metabolizing enzymes and 28 genes encoding lipid‐metabolizing enzymes, based on orthology to their counterparts in the fly, Drosophila melanogaster, and the mosquito, Anopheles gambiae . We found that the number of genes for carbohydrate metabolism appears to be more evolutionarily labile than for lipid metabolism. In particular, we identified striking changes in gene number or genomic organization for genes encoding glycolytic enzymes, cellulase, glucose oxidase and glucose dehydrogenases, glucose‐methanol‐choline (GMC) oxidoreductases, fucosyltransferases, and lysozymes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1