Litcius/Paper detail

Obligate chimerism in male yellow crazy ants

Hugo Darras, C. Berney, Sasitorn Hasin, Jochen Drescher, Heike Feldhaar, Laurent Keller

2023Science15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Multicellular organisms typically develop from a single fertilized egg and therefore consist of clonal cells. We report an extraordinary reproductive system in the yellow crazy ant. Males are chimeras of haploid cells from two divergent lineages: R and W. R cells are overrepresented in the males' somatic tissues, whereas W cells are overrepresented in their sperm. Chimerism occurs when parental nuclei bypass syngamy and divide separately within the same egg. When syngamy takes place, the diploid offspring either develops into a queen when the oocyte is fertilized by an R sperm or into a worker when fertilized by a W sperm. This study reveals a mode of reproduction that may be associated with a conflict between lineages to preferentially enter the germ line.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyObligateMulticellular organismSpermPloidySomatic cellReproductionOffspringZoologyOocyteBroodMeiosisGeneticsEvolutionary biologyEcologyEmbryoGenePregnancyInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorAnimal Behavior and ReproductionPlant and animal studies