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18.06.2018 10:08

Brood care gene steers the division of labour among ants

Sabine Wendler Senckenberg Biodiversität und Klima Forschungszentrum Pressestelle
Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseen

    Frankfurt am Main/ Germany, June 18th, 2018. The success of ant colonies is based on a strict division of labour. However, until now the genes responsible for regulating the behaviour of the workers have not been known. Now scientists at the University of Mainz and the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre have identified a gene, whose activity regulates the sensitivity to brood scent and thus influences the brood care behaviour of ants. This is the result of genetic studies and experiments on the North American ant species Temnothorax longispinosus, as the group reports in the current issue of the journal “PLoS Biology”.

    A strict division of labour prevails in the ant colony. The queen is primarily responsible for reproduction. The workers carry out all other tasks, which change significantly over the course of their lives. Young worker ants take care of the young and engage in brood care. Middle-aged workers take care of their adult nestmates. Towards the end of their lives, they go foraging for food.

    Scientists at the University of Mainz and the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre have identified a gene that plays a key role in these changing responsibilities. “In a gene expression study we discovered that the Vitellogenin gene like-A is more active in brood carers than among the workers who forage for food. This different gene activity influences the degree to which ants perceive task-related stimuli. Accordingly, the tasks they carry out change,” explains Professor Susanne Foitzik, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz.

    Following the genetic study the group tested the role of the Vitellogenin gene like-A by means of an experiment. To this end, the gene was down-regulated in young workers of the North American species Temnothorax longispinosus. The ants thus manipulated cared for the brood to a lesser extent that ants of the same age in a control group. Instead they cared more for adult nestmates, a task they would normally assume later in life.

    In line with theoretical models on the division of labour in social insects, this switch in tasks indicates that the ants are less sensitive to brood scents, and more sensitive to the signals of the adult workers.

    Ants, like bees, wasps and termites, are social insects. The success of their communities based on group members specialising in certain tasks Thus they carry them out more efficiently. To date, however, little is known about the mechanisms that lead to the specialisation of the workers.

    “To date, only in honey bees has a gene been identified, which regulates foraging behaviour. Our first record of a gene in ants that regulates brood care, i.e. another important task, has therefore closed a knowledge gap in the genetically-based behavioural control of social insects,” summarises Dr. Barbara Feldmeyer, Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre.

    Contact

    Dr. Barbara Feldmeyer
    Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre
    Phone +49 (0)69 7542 1839
    barbara.feldmeyer@senckenberg.de

    Prof. Susanne Foitzik
    Institute of Organismic and Molecular Evolution,
    Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
    Phone +49 (0)6131 39 27840
    foitzik@uni-mainz.de

    Sabine Wendler
    Press officer
    Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre
    Phone +49 (0)69 7542 1818
    pressestelle@senckenberg.de

    Publication

    Kohlmeier, P., Feldmeyer, B. and Foitzik, S. (2018):Vitellogenin-like A–associated shifts in social cue responsiveness regulate behavioral task specialization in an ant. PLoS Biology 16(6): e2005747. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2005747

    Press images may be used at no cost for editorial reporting, provided that the original author’s name is published, as well. The images may only be passed on to third parties in the context of current reporting.

    This press release and press images are also available at www.senckenberg.de/presse

    To study and understand nature with its limitless diversity of living creatures and to preserve and manage it in a sustainable fashion as the basis of life for future generations – this has been the goal of the Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung (Senckenberg Nature Research Society) for 200 years. This integrative “geobiodiversity research” and the dissemination of research and science are among Senckenberg’s main tasks. Three nature museums in Frankfurt, Görlitz and Dresden display the diversity of life and the earth’s development over millions of years. The Senckenberg Nature Research Society is a member of the Leibniz Association. The Senckenberg Nature Museum in Frankfurt am Main is supported by the City of Frankfurt am Main as well as numerous other partners. Additional information can be found at www.senckenberg.de


    Bilder

    Young ants of the North American species Temnothorax Longispinosus engaged in brood care.
    Young ants of the North American species Temnothorax Longispinosus engaged in brood care.
    Photo: Barbara Feldmeyer
    None


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    Young ants of the North American species Temnothorax Longispinosus engaged in brood care.


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