Evolutionary Biology & Ecology, University of Freiburg, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany.
Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT 0810, Australia.
J Exp Biol. 2024 Nov 15;227(22). doi: 10.1242/jeb.246497. Epub 2024 Nov 13.
Social insects (termites, ants and some bees and wasps) are emerging model organisms of ageing research. In this Commentary, I outline which advantages they offer compared with other organisms. These include the co-occurrence of extraordinarily long-lived, highly fecund queens together with short-lived workers within colonies that share the same genetic background. I then summarize which new insights have been gained so far from social insect studies. Research on social insects has led to the development of a universal mechanistic framework underlying the regulation of ageing and other life-history trade-offs in insects: the TI-J-LiFe network (short for TOR/IIS-juvenile hormone-lifespan/fecundity). Because of its conservative nature, this network can be extended to also incorporate vertebrates. Current data for social insect models suggest that molecular re-wirings along the I-J-Fe (IIS-juvenile hormone-fecundity) axis of the network can explain the concurrent long lifespans and high fecundity of queens. During social evolution, pathways that foster a high fecundity have apparently been uncoupled from mechanisms that shorten lifespan in solitary insects. Thus, fecundity-related vitellogenesis is uncoupled from life-shortening high juvenile hormone (JH)-titres in the honeybee and from insulin/insulin-like growth factor signalling (IIS) activity in ants. In termites, similarly, vitellogenesis seems tissue-specifically unlinked from JH signalling and IIS activity might have lost life-shortening consequences. However, as in solitary animals, the downstream processes (Li of the TI-J-LiFe network) that cause actual ageing (e.g. oxidative stress, transposable element activity, telomere attrition) seem to differ between species and environments. These results show how apparently hard-wired mechanisms underlying life-history trade-offs can be overcome during evolution.
社会性昆虫(白蚁、蚂蚁和一些蜜蜂和胡蜂)是衰老研究中新兴的模式生物。在这篇评论中,我概述了它们与其他生物体相比具有哪些优势。这些优势包括在同一遗传背景的群体中同时存在寿命极长、高度繁殖的蚁后和寿命较短的工蚁。然后,我总结了迄今为止从社会性昆虫研究中获得的新见解。对社会性昆虫的研究导致了一个普遍的机制框架的发展,该框架是昆虫衰老和其他生命史权衡的基础:TI-J-LiFe 网络(代表 TOR/IIS- 保幼激素-寿命/繁殖力)。由于其保守性,这个网络可以扩展到包括脊椎动物。目前关于社会性昆虫模型的数据表明,网络中 I-J-Fe(IIS-保幼激素-繁殖力)轴上的分子重布线可以解释蚁后同时具有长寿命和高繁殖力的现象。在社会进化过程中,促进高繁殖力的途径显然与缩短独居昆虫寿命的机制脱钩。因此,在蜜蜂中,与繁殖力相关的卵黄生成与缩短寿命的高保幼激素(JH)水平脱钩,而在蚂蚁中与胰岛素/胰岛素样生长因子信号(IIS)活性脱钩。在白蚁中,同样,卵黄生成似乎与 JH 信号和 IIS 活性在组织上脱钩,而 IIS 活性可能失去了缩短寿命的后果。然而,与独居动物一样,导致实际衰老的下游过程(TI-J-LiFe 网络中的 Li)似乎在不同物种和环境之间存在差异。这些结果表明,在进化过程中,生命史权衡的基础机制是如何被克服的。