Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2012;739:78-92. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4614-1704-0_5.
Eusocial species, animals which live in colonies with a reproductive division of labor, typically have closed societies, in which colony members are allowed entry and nonmembers, including animals of the same species, are excluded. This implies an ability to discriminate colony members ("self") from nonmembers ("nonself"). We draw analogies between this type of discrimination and MHC-mediated cellular recognition in vertebrates. Recognition of membership in eusocial colonies is typically mediated by differences in the surface chemistry between members and nonmembers and we review studies which support this hypothesis. In rare instances, visual signals mediate recognition. We highlight the need for better understanding of which surface compounds actually mediate recognition and for further work on how differences between colony members and nonmembers are perceived.
真社会性物种,即生活在具有生殖分工的群体中的动物,通常具有封闭的社会,允许成员进入,而不允许包括同种动物在内的非成员进入。这意味着它们能够区分群体成员(“自我”)和非成员(“非我”)。我们将这种类型的区分与脊椎动物中 MHC 介导的细胞识别进行类比。真社会性群体成员的识别通常由成员和非成员之间的表面化学差异介导,我们综述了支持这一假设的研究。在极少数情况下,视觉信号介导识别。我们强调需要更好地理解哪些表面化合物实际上介导识别,以及进一步研究群体成员和非成员之间的差异是如何被感知的。