Ant queens control insulin to boost lifespan and reproduction
In most of the animal world, there’s a sad trade-off to make: The more babies you have, the shorter you live.
But ants buck the system. The queens — the only individuals in a nest that reproduce — also live five, 10, up to 30 times longer than their genetically identical worker sisters. How do they pull off what the rest of animalkind cannot?
A new study from University of Florida biologist Hua Yan and his colleagues at New York University finds that ant queens implement a dual-control system for insulin, the metabolism-controlling hormone that explains much of the trade-off between reproduction and lifespan. Queens massively boost their insulin production, which promotes egg development. But their ovaries also produce an insulin blocker that slows down the aging process.
“Hopefully this finding allows us to better understand the aging process in many animals,” said Yan, an assistant professor of biology at UF who also studies how ants communicate with pheromones to organize their society.
Whether mammals, including humans, could ever benefit from partially blocking the insulin pathway remains an open question. Calorie restriction, which decreases insulin production, can increase lifespan in mammals but hurts reproduction.
The research team published their work on Sept. 1 in Science. Yan and NYU researchers Comzit Opachaloemphan and Francisco Carmona-Aldana led the study, which was supervised by NYU professors Claude Desplan and Danny Reinberg.
They studied Harpegnathos saltator ants, also known as Indian jumping ants, because of a helpful transformation the ants undergo. When a queen dies, the remaining workers duel to decide which ants will become new pseudo-queens capable of laying eggs. The pseudo-queens acquire longer lifespans, but the process is also reversible if they encounter a true queen. That gave Yan and the research team the perfect system to study how lifespan extension can be switched on and off.
They discovered that pseudo-queens produce much more insulin, which they expected. Insulin helps convert food into energy, and reproduction is an energy-intensive process.
“It’s straightforward, the pseudo-queen is reproductive, so they need insulin. But insulin normally shortens lifespan, yet they have much longer lifespan – why?” Yan pondered. “There must be something in the insulin signaling of the ants that differentially regulates reproduction and longevity.”
The research team found this extra layer of control in the form of an insulin blocker, called Imp-L2, which is produced by the newly active ovaries of the pseudo-queen. This insulin blocker slows down the part of the insulin pathway normally responsible for accelerating the aging process, but leaves the reproduction-boosting side of insulin signaling intact.
In a sense, the ants get to have their cake and eat it too, coupling egg-laying with a long life.
JOURNAL
Science
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Experimental study
SUBJECT OF RESEARCH
Animals
ARTICLE TITLE
Insulin signaling in the long-lived reproductive caste of ants
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
1-Sep-2022
Altered insulin signaling allows queen ants to live long and reproductively prosper
Altered insulin signaling in ant queens may endow them with their characteristic longevity, despite being a colony’s sole reproducers, researchers report. In most living organisms, there exists a trade-off between reproduction and lifespan. This is largely because animals that bear many offspring often allocate important nutritional and metabolic resources for reproduction at the cost of their own longevity. It’s thought that the insulin and the insulin-like growth factor signaling pathway underlies the anti-correlation between reproduction and shortened lifespan. Ants are an exception to this pattern, however. In any colonies, reproductive activity is limited to one or a few queens. Reproductive queens can live for decades – many lifetimes beyond a colony’s non-reproductive female workers – and lay millions of eggs. In some ant species, like Harpegnathos saltator, workers can switch castes and become reproductive pseudo-queens, or gamergates, when a queen dies or is removed. Despite being born as workers, gamergates can live up to five times longer than their previous counterparts. What’s more, gamergates can revert to workers (revertants) when placed in a colony with an established worker caste, returning to a shortened life span. How this reproduction-associated longevity in these animals is regulated, particularly during active reproduction, remains unclear. To evaluate the relationship between reproduction and longevity, Hua Yan and colleagues performed bulk RNA sequencing on tissues important for reproduction and metabolism from worker, gamergate, and revertant H. saltator ants and compared gene expression during caste switching. As expected, Yan et al. found that insulin was upregulated to promote oogenesis in gamergates, however, this did not lead to a shorter lifespan as it does in other animals. The authors propose that part of the insulin signaling pathway (the branch that activates the protein kinase AKT) is inhibited in the fat body of gamergates and that this may be mediated by a protein Imp-L2. According to the authors, decreased activity of AKT may enable H. saltator queens and pseudo-queens to live longer.
JOURNAL
Science
ARTICLE TITLE
Insulin signaling in the long-lived reproductive caste of ants
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
2-Sep-2022
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