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Friday, July 01, 2005

Clone war of the sexes

Echoed on the Panda's Thumb

All of the parthenogenetic species with which I'm familiar are female. Females, obviously, have all the machinery for reproduction in place, and all they have to replace is the function of one itty-bitty little sperm, while for a male to reproduce without females, he'd have to replace the functions of big, well-stocked eggs and uteruses or whatever equivalent organs the mother of the species has at her disposal. It's hard for males to get around the female contribution to reproduction. At last, though, one species of fire ant has shown a way to do it, not that I'd ever want to go down this particular road.

I'm going to expand on this strange genetic pattern John Wilkins described. First, though, here's a little background on haplodiploid sex determination.

In mammals, we have a familiar sex determination system. We're all diploid, or possess two sets of chromosomes, and we produce haploid gametes, sperm and egg, that fuse to produce a new diploid. All female gametes have one X chromosome, and males produce two kinds of gametes: one kind also has one X chromosome, and the other has one Y chromosome instead. At fertilization, if the female gamete fuses with an X-carrying sperm, it will have two X chromosomes and develop into a female, and if it instead gets a Y chromosome, it will have one X and one Y and develop into a male.

Some insects, specifically most species of the Hymenoptera, do things differently, with a sex determination system called haplodiploidy. Males are always haploid, having only one set of chromosomes, and they produce only one kind of gamete, and all of their gametes are genetically identical. Females are diploid, and produce haploid eggs. If the eggs are fertilized by a male, they develop into females; unfertilized eggs develop into males. Fathers can only have daughters, and mothers produce sons without the contribution of a male. Males don't have fathers, literally.

Here's a diagram from the Nature summary that might help clarify all that. The paternal gene set is blue (remember, he's only got one!), while the two maternal gene sets are colored pink and red.

haplodiploidy

The pathway labeled "a" is what happens if the pink or red gamete is unfertilized: it produces a haploid male with only his mother's genes. The path labeled "b" is fertilization, and all of the progeny are diploid and female.

In social insects, most of these diploid females become sterile workers ("d"). Some of them will be changed by environmental factors to become repreductive females, or gynes ("c")—in bees, for instance, larvae fed "royal jelly" go on to develop their reproductive potential and become queens. Insects that use haplodiploid sex determination are predisposed to develop social systems, because of another quirk of genetics.

Pick any female in this system. Half of her genes are blue, coming from her father, and half are red or pink, coming from her mother. The degree of relatedness of one individual to her mother is ½. This is also true in us; half your genes come from your mother, and half from your father.

We can also calculate our degree of relatedness to our siblings. In humans, we get half our genes from our mother, but which half is random. There is a 50:50 chance that any one maternal gene I carry is also shared with my brother; the other possibility is that he inherited the other maternal gene. The same is true of the paternal gene set. The average fraction of genes shared through common descent between two sibling mammals is:

(½ x ½) + (½ x ½) = ½

You are just as related to your brother or sister as you are to your father or mother.

In haplodiploid insects, it's different. The father only has one set of genes to pass along, so the probability that an ant will share the same paternal genes as her sister is 100%. So the degree of relatedness for two sisters is:

(1 x ½) + (½ x ½) = ¾

A typical female ant is genetically more closely related to her sister than to her mother or her daughters. Hamilton proposed that this increased the incentive for cooperation, and was one of the factors in leading many of the Hymenoptera down the path to eusociality.

Fire ants, Wasmannia auropunctata, have added another twist to this pattern. Fournier et al. analyzed the relatedness of queens, workers, and males in multiple nests in French Guiana, and found that all of the queens from a colony had identical genotypes—they were clones. Similarly all of the males from a colony were clones of each other, and most surprisingly, they were not related to the queens. How to explain this? These fire ants have developed new paths of reproduction.

haplodiploidy

First, the queens are capable of reproducing parthenogenetically, pathway "e". They presumably suppress one of the meiotic divisions to produce diploid gametes without any contribution from a male. This is a very bad deal for males: they have just been rendered completely superfluous. It's also a bad deal for the workers in the colony. Remember, the incentive for sociality is that all of the sterile worker females are related to ¾ degree to the next generation queen, but now they are only related to the ½ degree to the parthenogenetically produced queens. To make a bum deal even suckier, the queens also seem to have evolved genetic mechanisms to suppress gyne production from the ranks of the diploids produced by fertilization (the big X over pathway "c"). Can you say "exploitation of the working class"? Sure.

Oh, well. What can you expect? Fire ants are evil.

Notice that the males are still needed for one thing, though: production of sterile workers. Genetically, they gain nothing from this. The male lineage would hit a dead end at this point, since none of their progeny would ever reproduce. They've hit on an interesting solution, though. Something in their genome is capable of eliminating the female gene set, kicking out the maternal chromosomes and producing haploid individuals after fertilization (path "f"). Male genes now have a way to make it into future generations.

The net consequence, however, is that males and females of this species have become genetically isolated and represent parallel lineages that do not mix, except in the production of a sterile set of workers in each generation. Males parasitize the queen's eggs to make males, and queens exploit the labor of the workers to produce new queens.

I am not a population geneticist*, and some of this stuff is hard for me to grasp. In particular, I couldn't see why the fire ant would also shut down the normal pathway ("a") for making males from the maternal genome. David Queller offers this explanation, though:

Strange patterns of natural selection might also explain why two standard modes of reproduction have shut down. First, why would queens give up producing males by the normal pathway (path "a")? As the system stands, there is no selection for queens to produce males. A queen who produced males gains no advantage in her own (female) gene pool; it is like putting her genes in another species. I suspect that similar logic applied, although with less force, when the female and male pools were only partially separated. The lower value of putting genes in the male pool would select against females doing so.

J.B.S. Haldane was right. "The universe is not only stranger than we imagine it to be, it is stranger than we can imagine it to be."


*Which leads to one caveat I have. The research is done by sampling the genetic characteristics of ants in multiple colonies, and the novel mechanisms of reproduction mentioned are so far inferences only. I'd like to see experimental demonstration of male clonal reproduction a little more directly…but that's because I'm not a population geneticist.


Fournier D, Estoup A, Orivel J, Foucaud J, Jourdan H, Le Breton J, Keller L (2005) Clonal reproduction by males and females in the little fire ant. Nature 435:1230-1234.

Queller D (2005) Males from Mars. Nature 435:1167-1168.


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Comments:
#30500: — 07/01  at  12:43 PM
This is SO COOL!! I feel a science fiction story coming on...



#30501: Chris — 07/01  at  01:08 PM
I don't know about you, but after having been bitten on two occasions this summer (a total of almost 50 bites), I'd rather fire ants not reproduce at all! Still, if they have to reproduce, I'm glad they do so in fascinating ways.



#30503: coturnix — 07/01  at  01:11 PM
Shouldn't you use "sex determination" in place of "sex selection"?



's avatar #30505: PZ Myers — 07/01  at  01:32 PM
Yes, what was I thinking? Fixed now.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#30506: dr. dave — 07/01  at  01:40 PM
This stuff is SO fascinating to me, as a physicist. It's almost enough to make me view biologists with somewhat less puzzlement and disdain. ;)

(Also... much more interesting than creationist-baiting!)

Keep up the good work.



#30508: — 07/01  at  01:41 PM
The oddness of fire ants' reproductive strategy is fascinating but not quite enough for me to stop killing them. I am also almost driven to admiration by their ability to outcompete native species in the continental US. They are quite a successful species, though best admired at a distance.

Chris, a fire ant sting is usually a good example of the value of pain in the learning process. They bite to hold on to their victim so that they can administer several stings from what I have read are adapted ovipositors. On a run one day I paused at the side of the road until I felt a severe burning sensation on my ankle. I had stopped directly on top of a fire ant nest. I have never done that since. I make a point of poisoning any nests I find in my yard, and sometimes in other people's yards.



#30509: — 07/01  at  02:45 PM
Does anyone have anything good to say about ants at all - not just fire ants? I'd been holding off writing about ants myself for a couple of weeks now and still only have a list of negatives. I've been on the point of declaring them the ultimate evil. :-D NB Someone else's positive or negative may not count the same way with me of course.



#30510: — 07/01  at  02:53 PM
I have nothing against ants in general. They fill a niche. Fire ants are my particular peeve -- but not a pet peeve.



#30511: Rory Parle — 07/01  at  02:58 PM
Fascinating. I'm going to spend the next month trying to explain this to friends and family, and probably failing to recall all of the beautiful complexity.



#30512: ACW — 07/01  at  03:00 PM
Read E. O. Wilson; ants are a crucial part of the soil ecosystem almost everywhere. Without ants churning and aerating the soil, huge parts of the soil ecology would collapse.



#30515: IAMB — 07/01  at  03:35 PM
Ants are also extremely useful in the lab if you have some bones that need to be completely stripped. They will make short work of any residual soft tissues given half a chance- and they are thorough.



#30520: — 07/01  at  04:18 PM
Ah, so following on from my question from the previous thread, the male selection occurs in a fertilised egg? The male-determining genes kick out or destroy the female chromosomes somehow? A variation on the strategy of genes that are fatal to offspring of a particular sex, but much cleverer. Neat.



's avatar #30521: PZ Myers — 07/01  at  04:30 PM
As my footnote says, that is what is inferred to occur. The paper doesn't actually confirm it.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#30523: Raven — 07/01  at  04:37 PM
I make a point of poisoning any nests I find in my yard, and sometimes in other people's yards.


Every once in a while, someone's writing brings home to me how different the world I grew up in is from today's. Back in the day, we burned leaves, and rode on the side of pickup truck beds, neither of which you see kids doing anymore. My dad used to pour gasoline on fire ant nests and light them right up. I'm retrospectively horrified on several different levels, but that was pretty standard lawn care in '60s Alabama, and no one gave it a thought then.

In this day of mandatory seatbelts, children's carseats, bicycle helmets, and knee/elbow pads, I bet most children grow up today without knowing the smell of gasoline fireballs going up in the backyard.



#30524: Alon Levy — 07/01  at  04:45 PM
In this day of mandatory seatbelts, children's carseats, bicycle helmets, and knee/elbow pads, I bet most children grow up today without knowing the smell of gasoline fireballs going up in the backyard.

That's probably also because a lot of them live in the cities or in urbanized suburbs and hence have no backyards.



#30525: Alex — 07/01  at  04:45 PM
A clarification:

Wasmannia auropunctata, the little fire ant reported on here, is NOT the same species as the red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta) that plagues the southeastern U.S. Wasmannia are little tiny orange ants, only a couple milimeters long.



#30527: Raven — 07/01  at  05:14 PM
Thanks for the clarification, Alex. Now you have made me curious, so I checked out Tree of Life Web.

Oh, crap. There are ~200 species of fire ants and thief ants. As Solenopsis, they are contained in Solenopsidini, which is in Myrmicinae.

Wasmannia is contained in Blepharidattini, which is also in Myrmicinae, and thus a sister group to Solenopsidini. So the fire ants of my youth, and the ones of the article are very distant cousins at best.

The website gives all the synapomorphies if you want to see how different that many different kinds of ants are from each other, but unfortunately, all those invertebrate anatomy terms are blah blah blah Ginger to me.



#30529: — 07/01  at  05:31 PM
"it is like putting her genes in another species."

It sure would seem so. As I see it, you've got the lineage of Eve Queen and, er, Adam Ant each going their separate ways without interaction (except where they combine in sterile workers). How do they keep from diverging?

I guess that's the key: Eve & Adam are under pressure to maintain their mutuality in order to produce workers.



#30530: jotter — 07/01  at  05:32 PM
Good warmup!

Now are you ready to take on the Ambystoma Jeffersonianum complex?

http://www.livingunderworld.org/amphibianArticles/article0015.shtml



#30531: coturnix — 07/01  at  06:17 PM
Solenopsis folks were at the loss to understand that species' strange mating system until they invoked selection at the level of the group. Yet this system appears even more complex and suggests also genic selection and perhaps embryonic selection, in conflict with and in addition to the usual organismic selection and, in this species also very likely, group selection.



#30532: coturnix — 07/01  at  06:20 PM
Google finds about 150 hits for "Solenopsis" and "group selection" including several PDFs of papers, for those who want to learn more about the system.



#30533: coturnix — 07/01  at  06:23 PM
Fixed link (I hope):
Google



#30534: coturnix — 07/01  at  06:23 PM
Nope. Did not work. Just type in the key words yourself. Sorry....



#30539: — 07/01  at  07:54 PM
Facinating things, ants. There's supposed to be more kilos of ants on earth than any other animal life, so I've heard. When I was young I used to play with sugar ants, which are large, stingless, amber coloured ants. Very pretty. When I was a little older I read in a book that when ants meet, they will kiss each other and then fight if they are from different colonies. Many a time I put ants from different colonies together to watch them fight, but always after kissing they would run like hell away from each other. Maybe ants are smarter than the author gave them credit for? Individual ants don't want to fight, but when there are thousands of them together, with the scent of each other's battle phermones fresh in their receptors, they will do battle. Interesting. Reminds me of another species I know.



#30540: Joseph ODonnell — 07/01  at  08:08 PM
" I have nothing against ants in general. They fill a niche. Fire ants are my particular peeve -- but not a pet peeve. "

Why I agree with the idea that ants are a useful organism in terms of the whole ecosystem, fireants are not always good. As some of you are undoubtably aware, they have been 'invading' (and that IS the right way to think of them) America for some time now. Several insect species and even some small mammals have been pushed back in their range and extinctions may be likely in some area. They are horrific pests and should be considered as something that needs to be terminated on sight.

In their natural habitat they are perfectly find, amazingly interesting organisms though.



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