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Male fire ant neurotransmitter precursors trigger reproductive development in females after mating.

Robert K Vander MeerSatya P ChintaTappey H JonesErin E O'ReillyRachelle M M Adams
Published in: Communications biology (2021)
Social insect queens have evolved mechanisms to prevent competition from their sexual daughters. For Solenopsis invicta, the fire ant, queens have evolved a primer pheromone that retards reproductive development in their winged reproductive daughters. If these daughters are removed from the influence of the queen, it takes about a week to start reproductive development; however, it starts almost immediately after mating. This dichotomy has been unsuccessfully investigated for several decades. Here we show that male fire ants produce tyramides, derivatives of the biogenic amine tyramine, in their reproductive system. Males transfer tyramides to winged females during mating, where the now newly mated queens enzymatically convert tyramides to tyramine. Tyramine floods the hemolymph, rapidly activating physiological processes associated with reproductive development. Tyramides have been found only in the large Myrmicinae ant sub-family (6,800 species), We suggest that the complex inhibition/disinhibition of reproductive development described here will be applicable to other members of this ant sub-family.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • randomized controlled trial
  • mental health
  • signaling pathway
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • drosophila melanogaster