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A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites

Most ant species have two distinct female castes, queens and workers, yet the developmental and genetic mechanisms that produce these alternative phenotypes remain poorly understood. Working with a clonal ant, we discovered a variant strain that expresses queen-like traits in individuals that would...

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Autores principales: Trible, Waring, Chandra, Vikram, Lacy, Kip D., Limón, Gina, McKenzie, Sean K., Olivos-Cisneros, Leonora, Arsenault, Samuel V., Kronauer, Daniel J. C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10050096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36858043
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.067
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author Trible, Waring
Chandra, Vikram
Lacy, Kip D.
Limón, Gina
McKenzie, Sean K.
Olivos-Cisneros, Leonora
Arsenault, Samuel V.
Kronauer, Daniel J. C.
author_facet Trible, Waring
Chandra, Vikram
Lacy, Kip D.
Limón, Gina
McKenzie, Sean K.
Olivos-Cisneros, Leonora
Arsenault, Samuel V.
Kronauer, Daniel J. C.
author_sort Trible, Waring
collection PubMed
description Most ant species have two distinct female castes, queens and workers, yet the developmental and genetic mechanisms that produce these alternative phenotypes remain poorly understood. Working with a clonal ant, we discovered a variant strain that expresses queen-like traits in individuals that would normally become workers. The variants show changes in morphology, behavior, and fitness that cause them to rely on workers in wild-type colonies for survival. Overall, they resemble the queens of many obligately parasitic ants that have evolutionarily lost the worker caste and live inside colonies of closely related hosts. The prevailing theory for the evolution of these workerless social parasites is that they evolve from reproductively isolated populations of facultative intermediates that acquire parasitic phenotypes in a stepwise fashion. However, empirical evidence for such facultative ancestors remains weak, and it is unclear how reproductive isolation could gradually arise in sympatry. In contrast, we isolated these variants just a few generations after they arose within their wild-type parent colony, implying that the complex phenotype reported here was induced in a single genetic step. This suggests that a single genetic module can decouple the coordinated mechanisms of caste development, allowing an obligately parasitic variant to arise directly from a free-living ancestor. Consistent with this hypothesis, the variants have lost one of the two alleles of a putative supergene that is heterozygous in wild types. These findings provide a plausible explanation for the evolution of ant social parasites and implicate new candidate molecular mechanisms for ant caste differentiation.
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spelling pubmed-100500962023-03-29 A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites Trible, Waring Chandra, Vikram Lacy, Kip D. Limón, Gina McKenzie, Sean K. Olivos-Cisneros, Leonora Arsenault, Samuel V. Kronauer, Daniel J. C. Curr Biol Article Most ant species have two distinct female castes, queens and workers, yet the developmental and genetic mechanisms that produce these alternative phenotypes remain poorly understood. Working with a clonal ant, we discovered a variant strain that expresses queen-like traits in individuals that would normally become workers. The variants show changes in morphology, behavior, and fitness that cause them to rely on workers in wild-type colonies for survival. Overall, they resemble the queens of many obligately parasitic ants that have evolutionarily lost the worker caste and live inside colonies of closely related hosts. The prevailing theory for the evolution of these workerless social parasites is that they evolve from reproductively isolated populations of facultative intermediates that acquire parasitic phenotypes in a stepwise fashion. However, empirical evidence for such facultative ancestors remains weak, and it is unclear how reproductive isolation could gradually arise in sympatry. In contrast, we isolated these variants just a few generations after they arose within their wild-type parent colony, implying that the complex phenotype reported here was induced in a single genetic step. This suggests that a single genetic module can decouple the coordinated mechanisms of caste development, allowing an obligately parasitic variant to arise directly from a free-living ancestor. Consistent with this hypothesis, the variants have lost one of the two alleles of a putative supergene that is heterozygous in wild types. These findings provide a plausible explanation for the evolution of ant social parasites and implicate new candidate molecular mechanisms for ant caste differentiation. 2023-03-27 2023-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10050096/ /pubmed/36858043 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.067 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Trible, Waring
Chandra, Vikram
Lacy, Kip D.
Limón, Gina
McKenzie, Sean K.
Olivos-Cisneros, Leonora
Arsenault, Samuel V.
Kronauer, Daniel J. C.
A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title_full A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title_fullStr A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title_full_unstemmed A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title_short A caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
title_sort caste differentiation mutant elucidates the evolution of ant social parasites
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10050096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36858043
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.067
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