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Among animals, differences between the sexes are usually specified by differential
gene activities in individuals that are genetically determined to be either
males or females. The sex-specific information is given by a primary
sex-determining signal at the beginning of a biochemical surge that results
in development of a male or female individual. Primary sex -determining
signals vary among animal groups (Bull 1983). Thus, the primary sex
determining signal in humans and butterflies is the identity of the sex
chromosomes (XX, XY for humans and ZZ, ZW for butterflies), and the primary
sex determining signal for the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, and
the nematode Caenofhabditis elegans, is the ratio of sex chromosomes
to other chromosomes. Few of the primary genetic signals of sex determination
have been dissected to their molecular and genetic basis for only a few
organisms, all of which have sex chromosomes. However, not much information
exists for organisms that do not have sex chromosomes. Sex Determination in the Hymenoptera
Hymenoptera demonstrate a different mode of sex determination. Here, males develop nom unfertilized;
haploid eggs, and females develop from fertilized eggs that are diploid. This
kind of sex determination is known as haplo-diploidy, and it is understood at
the chromosomal, but not the molecular level, in a number of species of
Hymenoptera. A number of hymenopterans share a mode of chromosomal sex
determination known as 'complementary sex determination' (CSD) (Cook &
Crozier l995; Wu et al. 2003). There are two basic types of CS: single locus
CSD and multiple loci CSD. Under single-locus CSD, sex is determined at one
highly polymorphic genetic locus known as the 'sex locus'. Fertilized eggs
may be heterozygous at the sex locus and develop into females, or homozygous
and develop into diploid males. Unfertilized eggs are hemizygous and develop
into haploid males. Diploid male production associated with CSD represents a
strong genetic load because diploid males are commonly inviable, sterile, or
produce sterile daughters (Godnay & Cook 1997; but see Cowan &
Stahlhut 2004). The severity of this genetic load increases with the
frequency of inbreeding and with decreased genetic diversity in general.
Complementary sex determination was determined in the parasitoid wasp Habrobracon
hebetor in the 1940's using breeding studies and recessive eye color
markers, which identified paternal inheritance in males under conditions of
inbreeding (Whiting l943). CSD can cause severe shifts in sex ratio (toward
males) as well as declines in population growth because of the production of
diploid males, and can therefore reduce the effectiveness of parasitoids as
biological control agents (Stouthamer et al. 1992; Wu et al. 2003). However,
not all parasitoids have CSD, and Stouthamer et al. (1992) believed that
species lacking CSD are better equipped to control pest insects than species
that have CSD, a hypothesis that has received some empirical support (Heimpel
& Lundgren 2000).
The genetic mechanism of sex determination of parasitoids (or any
hymenopterans) that do not exhibit CSD) remains to be found, although genomic
imprinting was implicated in experiments on the parasitoid Nasonia
vitripennis (Dobson & Tanouye 1998). Even relatively closely related
parasitoid species, however, can differ in their mode of sex determination.
In particular, a single parasitoid genus (Cotesia) contains some
species that do, and some species that do not, exhibit CSD (Stouthamer et al.
1992; Niyibigira 2003a,b: Gu & Dom 2003; De Boer et al. submitted).
Studies on the honeybee, Apis mellifera, have led to the discovery of
a gene that acts as the primary sex-determining signal (Beye el al. 2003;
Beye 2004; Hassellman & Beye 2004). The discovery of this gene represents
a major breakthrough in our understanding of sex determination in the
Hymenoptera and opens up the possibility of understanding sex determination
in other hymenopterans with CSD, and also how it is that some hymenopterans
can have CSD and others do not.
Sex locus linkage maps have
been produced from the honeybee (Beye et al.1994, 1996, 1998; Hunt &
Page] 994; Hasselmann et al. 200];) and the parasitoid H. hebetor
(Holloway et al. 2000). In the honeybee, a relatively fine scale map was
produced that included a marker that flanked the putative sex locus by
approximately 50 KB. A chromosomal walk from this marker, along with
positional cloning led to the identification of a locus that was always
heterozygous in females (Beye et al. 2003). Molecular analysis of this region
led to the discovery of 9 exons spanning approximately 9 KB. Exons 2-9
produce the open reading frame of the gene, which was named complementary sex
determiner (csd) by Beye et al. (2003) (Fig. 2). Two areas of particular
interest were found in exons 6-9. One is a domain that contains a series of
repeated arginine (R) a serine (S) amino acid. These repeats are
characteristic for a family of proteins known as SR proteins, which are known
to playa role in mRNA binding in a number of other organisms (Mount &
Salz 2000; Beye et al. 2003). The highest degree of homology to csd was found
with the gene Iransfornler (Ira), which produces an SR protein that is part
of the sex-determining pathway in Drosophila (Beye et al. 2003). In
particular, Ira is involved in specific cleaving of doublesex and fruitless
rnRNAs, which results in expression of the female phenotype in Drosophila
(Cline & Meyer 1996). One major hypothesis therefore holds that csd is a
functional homologue of the Ira gene, and that it serves a function in the
biochemical sex-determination cascade comparable to the function 'Of Ira in Drosophila
(Beye 2004).
Homologs of the Apis mellifera csd gene have been found in A.
dorsata and A. cerana (Cho et aI, in press), and a 1 94-bp fragment
of a csd-like mRNA of the apid Melipona compressipes has been
published on Genbank with 85% homology to the Apis dorsata csd
gene. Some of the allele sequences
from exons 2 and 3 (see Fig. 2) from A. dorsata and A. cerana
are more closely related to alleles from A. mellifera than to other
alleles from their own species (Cho et a). in press). This indicates that
some sex alleles are older than their species, a possible consequence ancient
polymorphism' and incomplete lineage sorting at these loci (Brower et al.
1996). In the case of A. cerana and A. mellifera, molecular
clock analyses suggest that the two species diverged approximately 7 million
years ago, and that some of their sex alleles are 14 million years old. No
homology to csd has yet been found outside of the family Apidae as of 2006.
As previously noted, CSD is thought to be the ancestral mode of sex
determination in the Hymenoptera. If true, species that do not exhibit the CSD
phenotype have somehow lost CSD but retained haplo-diploidy. Alternative
models of sex determination that are compatible with haplo-diploidy include
genomic imprinting, in which there is differential expression of maternally
and paternally inherited alleles for a given gene or se1 of genes (Dobson
& Tanouye 1998; McDonald et al. 2005), genjc balance, where female-
determining genes respond to the increased dosage of DNA within a diploid
cell and male- determining genes do not, and multiple-locus (ml-CSD) (Cook
1993; Beukeboom 1995). ml-CSD was first suggested by Crozier (1977) as a
possible way to 'evolve away from' CSD. As we explain below, we have evidence
supporting a ml-CSD model for the parasitoid Cotesia plutellae, and a
more detailed investigation of ml-CSD forms objective 2 of this proposal. As
first put forth, diploid males could only be produced under ml-CSD when all
of 2 or more sex loci are homozygous. This would decrease the production of
diploid males with respect to sl-CSD, even under conditions of inbreeding and
genetic bottlenecks, and could therefore greatly decrease the genetic load
associated with CSD (Cook 1993a; De Boer et al. submitted; see below).
Multiple-locus CSD could evolve from sl-CSD by gene duplication. Gene
duplication occurs often, either through tandem duplication of the entire
gene, segmental duplication of part of a gene, or global duplication of the
entire genome (Prince & Pickett 2002). Classical models predict that the
loss of one redundant duplicate should be the predicted evolutionary outcome,
and that the retention of both duplicates should happen far more rarely.
However, retention appears to happen more often than models predict (Prince
& Pickett 2002). Duplicate genes can be retained by changes in the protein-coding
domain, or by changes in the regulatory elements, leading to different
spatial or temporal gene expression. The first of these mechanisms (change in
protein sequence) does not seem to be a plausible explanation for ml-CSD
because it commonly leads to an entirely different function of the duplicated
gene. A pathway by which the retention of the duplicated gene becomes more
likely was suggested by Force et al. (1999) and is called the
duplication-degeneration-complementation model. This model is based on the
fact that most eukaryotic genes have more than one function. Each duplicate
gene then loses one or more sub-functions through degenerative mutations in
the regulatory sequences. If both duplicates need to be retained to be able
to cover the full function of the ancestral gene, they become complementary.
So instead of leading to new gene functions, gene duplication leads to
partitioning of ancestral gene functions. Indeed, gene duplication can
increase expression diversity and enable tissue or developmental
specialization to evolve (Liet al. 2005). Below, we discuss the implications
of gene duplication and ml-CSD on the construction of hypotheses for
mechanisms of CSD function. Contemporary
Research
In the haplo-diploid Hymenoptera, unfertilized eggs develop as haploid
males and fertilized eggs typically develop as diploid females. In species
that have single-locus complementary sex determination (sl-CSD), fertilized
eggs may develop as diploid males if they are homozygous at a single locus (the
sex locus). sl-CSD was discovered in the 1940's by P.W. Whiting working in Habrobracon
hebetor, and has since been identified in over 50 species of
hymenopterans, including symphytans (sawflies), aculeates (ants, bees &
wasps) and ichneumonoids (braconid and ichneumonid parasitoids (Wilgenburg et
al. 2006). Diploid males are rare in nature because of the very high
diversity of alleles at the sex locus, but their frequency increases under
inbreeding or genetic bottlenecks (Cook & Crozier 1995). An exception is
vespid Euodynerus foramilatus (Cowan & Stahlhut 2004) where
diploid males are developmentally inviable or sterile and their appearance
indicates a severe loss of fitness (Cook & Crozier 1995). CSD is
suspected to be a major impediment to successful establishment of many exotic
ichneumonoid parasitoids in classical biological control because of the high
risk of genetic bottlenecks inherent in the process of biological control
(Stouthamer et al. 1993; Heimpel & Lundgren 2000; Wu et al. 2003).
Further insight of CSD
resulted in a greater understanding in recent years with the discovery and
cloning of the gene involved in sex determination under sl-CSD in the
honeybee, Apis mellifera, by Beye et al (2003) Beye (2004), Hassellman & Beye ( 2004). The gene
has been called the complementary sex determiner (csd) and interference with
the csd transcript converts genetic females into males (Beye et al. 2003).
The existence of csd should lead to a comprehensive understanding of the
molecular pathways that lead to sex determination in the honeybee. Further
research by Heimpel & associates revealed that sex determination in the
parasitoid Cotesiaplutellae (=C. vestalis) (Hymenoptera:
Braconidae) is mediated by two sex loci.
Homozygosity at both loci is probably required for production of
diploid males in C. plulellae. This mode of sex determination
(multiple-locus CSD; ml-CSD) had been expected as an extension of sl-CSD
since the 1970's (Crozier 1977), but has not been discovered until now by
Heimpel & associates. "
Would loss of CSD mean loss of csd ?
Not all hymenopterans exhibit CSD. Hymenopterans without CSD can
inbreed for dozens of generations with no diploid male production (e.g.
Skinner & Werren 1980; Cook 1993a; Niyibigira et al. 2004a,b), have their
genome duplicated by parthenogenesis-causing Wolbachia without
producing diploid males (e.g. Stouthamer & Kazmer 1994), or they simply
produce patterns of offspring sex ratio and mortality under modest levels
inbreeding that are incompatible with sl-CSD (e.g. Beukeboorn et al. 2000; Wu
et al.2005). These species a]] achieve haplo-diploidy without CSD. A viable
alternative to CSD has been discovered in the continuous inbreeding
parasitoid, Nasonia vitripennis, which is one of the species for which
CSD had been previously ruled out. Dobson & Tanouye (J 998) used crosses taking advantage of a
supernumerary Chromosome (PSR for
'paternal sex ratio) that causes paternal genome loss in females to
provide evidence consistent with a
genomic imprinting model of sex determination. In their studies, female N.
vitripennis development depended upon the presence of chromosomes of
paternal origin, regardless of ploidy or heterozygosity.
Whether or not genomic imprinting turns out to be a general
explanation for how sex is determined in hymenopterans without CSD, the fate
of the csd gene and the biochemical pathway that it contributes to in
hymenopterans that do not exhibit the CSD phenotype remains unknown. The
current state of knowledge regarding the distribution of CSD within the Hymenoptera can be summarized
as follows:: The CSD phenotype has been
described from over 50 hymenopterans from symphytans, acuJeates and
jchneumonoids, and the csd gene has been cloned and is under extensive study
in 3 species of Apis (Beye et
al. 2003; Cho et al, in press). Meanwhile, sl-CSD has been ruled out from
about] 8 species of hymenopterans, of whjch ml-CSD has also been ruled out
for 7 species. Most of the species that lack CSD belong to the large
hymenopteran clade called the 'Parasitjca' which has no members that do
exhibit CSD. However, species without
CSD are also found in the Aculeata
and the Ichneumonoidea, both of which have members with CSD.
Because of the phylogenetic distribution of the CSD phenotype, it has
been suggested that CSD is ancestral in the order, and that the loss of CSD
is an evolved condition that is favored evolutionarily because it achieves
haplo-diploidy without the production of diploid males (Cook & Crozier
]995; Godfray & Cook 1997).
The absence of a CSD phenotype does not preclude a role for the csd
gene in sex determination. Csd shares modest homology with transformer, a
gene that is involved in the sex d determination pathway of Drosophila (Beye et aJ. 2003). In
Hymenoptera that do not exhibit the CSD phenotype, two thoughts can be
articulated for the fate of the csd gene:
(1) the csd gene may become deactivated and cease to be transcribed
and/or translated; (2) csd proteins may continue to be produced and take part
in the biochemical sex determination pathway, but in such a way that
heterozygosity is not needed for the production of female offspring. These
are the csd deactivation and csd incorporation hypotheses. Early History of Sex
Determination Johannes Dzierzon, a Silesian priest, in 1845 proposed the theory
that drone bees (males) developed from unfertilized eggs while workers and
queens (both females) came from fertilized eggs. The theory is based on facts
that unmated and old queens produce drone broods and that race-crossing
produces drones like the maternal race, while the daughters are hybrid. Dzierzon's Law was strongly
contested requiring him to defend his position through publication (Dzierzon
1845, 1854). Dzierzon was aware
of Mendel's laws twelve years before Mendel published his work on peas. In
1854 he stated that the drones of the second generation from a cross resemble
either the paternal or the maternal race, and that these two types occur in
equal numbers. He thereby visualized the fundamental gametic ratio (Dzierzon
1954). Dzierzon's
law has been well established as a rule for the honeybee with few exceptions.
One of these is the Cape honeybee of southern Africa, Apis mellifera
var. kaffra. This race produces
females, both workers and queens, from unfertilized eggs laid by workers
(Jack 1916). The law applies to other insects of the order Hymenoptera,
including Vespidae, Formicidae, Ichneumonidae, Chalcididae and
Chalastogastra. Exceptions include unisexual species (males being unknown)
where the females reproduce indefinitely by parthenogenesis. There are also
some species which show alternation of unisexual and bisexual generations,
uniparental males and females occurring at one season, biparental females at
another. Mechanisms
& Hypotheses
Cytology.--There is no evidence that males are developed from
fertilized eggs in any wild
species of Hymenoptera. However, in the honeybee, which is a domestic
species, there are reports of biparental drones; and laboratory cultures of Bracon hebetor Say indicate the existence of biparental males. Females, on
the other hand, are usually produced from fertilized eggs, but as was
previously mentioned may come from unfertilized eggs. However, they always
have the diploid number of chromosomes. In general
males develop from unfertilized eggs and are azygotic. An azygote is an
organism that develops parthenogenetically from a haploid (reduced) nucleus.
Studies have revealed that in such azygotes originating from haploid cells,
later cleavages may result in doubling of chromosome number so that the adult
would be diploid and necessarily completely homozygous. For example, the
chromosome number of the male honeybee is characteristically 16 (Nachtsheim
1913). But this is though to be double the haploid set since eight tetrads
are found in the first oocyte. The male may then be a diploid azygote, with some male
tissues having a even higher number of chromosomes.
Genetics.--Originally the principles of sex determination in
arrhenotokous species were though to be similar to Drosophila, where: Males = X; Females = XX In the
honeybee, however, the ratio of X-chromosomes to autosomes (not sex chromosomes)
remains the same in both sexes. In Drosophila
the rates are different favoring a greater amount of X-chromosome material in
females, and males have more autosomal material. In the
principle of genic
balance, it is thought that certain genes tend to cause
development in one general direction while other genes counteract this trend.
A character develops according to the resultant of these genetic influences.
However, since each gene is represented several times in each cell and many
times in the developing organism as a whole, the only constant relationship
must be on a ratio basis rather than on the basis of an algebraic sum.
Therefore, with sex determination in the honeybee, the theory that the female
has merely the equivalent or double the male set of chromosomes (or genes) is
not in agreement with the principles held for other forms.
Early Hypotheses of Sex
Determination.--Petrunkewitsch (1901) concluded after embryological study
that while the body of the male bee is haploid, the gonads are diploid and
derived from a fusion of two polar nuclei after maturation of the egg. This
was later disproved by Nachtsheim (1913). In the male honeybee (drone) the
first meiotic division does not involve the nucleus. There is merely a small
cytoplasmic bud of polar
body given off. The second division appears to be equal as regards
the nucleus, but practically all the cytoplasm remains at the one pole. The
smaller cell or second polar body
degenerates and only one sperm cell is formed from a spermatocyte.
Castle (1903) first
applied the Mendelian principle of segregation to sex determination in the
honeybee. He postulated differential maturation not only for the egg but also
for what he supposed, following Petrunkewitsch, to be a reductional division
of a diploid spermatocyte. A pair of allelomorphic factors, maleness and femaleness, are concerned, with
femaleness being dominant. The female is heterozygous, but femaleness always passes
into the polar body, so that the unfertilized egg develops into a haploid
male. The testes, which are supposed to originate from a polar fusion
nucleus, are diploid and heterozygous for sex. Castle proposed maleness to
pass into the polar body in the maturation of the sperm, while dominant
femaleness remains in the sperm so that all fertilized eggs develop into
females.
Nachtsheim (1913) suggested
that ancestral Hymenoptera may have been digametic in the male; but that when
parthenogenesis and male haploidy were acquired, the first spermatocyte
division became abortive so that no male-producing spermatozoa were
developed. Nachtsheim showed that the second spermatocyte division is
equational with respect to the chromosomes, as it is in the ants and wasps in
which the cytoplasm, unlike that of the bee, divides equally. He concluded
that the haploid set of chromosomes determines maleness, the diploid set
femaleness. He failed to find any constant difference indicating X and Y, and
suggested differential maturation of the egg directed by the presence or
absence of the sperm nucleus. This is comparable to Castle's idea except that
it is free of Petrunkewitsch's errors regarding the origin and composition of
the male gonad. Both
Nachtsheim and Castle were close to modern ideas of genic balance. Nachtsheim's final views that the chromosome
composition of the female is merely double that of the male, is less
accurate.
Modern Hypotheses of Sex Determination.--Contemporary models that tend to explain sex determination
in Hymenoptera are (1) the single-locus, multiple allele model (Whiting 1939), (2) multiple-locus, multiple allele model (Crozier 1971) and (3) a genetic balance model (da Cuhna & Kerr 1957). Events leading to their development
are as follows:
Bracon hebetor [(Habrobracon
juglandis (Ashmead)]
produces normal males from unfertilized eggs and normal diploid females from
fertilized eggs. Occasionally a normal diploid female is produced by a virgin
mother from crosses of certain stocks having tetraploid oogonia (K. Speicher
1934). A
gynandromorph may be produced from a binucleate egg if one of the nuclei is
fertilized. Male parts of the body are, therefore, matroclinous, female parts
biparental. Gynandromorphs are also produced from uninucleate eggs in Habrolepis. If the
parents are closely related, diploid biparental males occur in relatively
small numbers, the ratios differing according to the stocks crossed (Bostian
1934). These diploid males show no evidence of feminization either in
external nor internal structures. Occasionally
a haploid mosaic male develops from an unfertilized egg laid by a female that
is heterozygous for one or more genes. These mosaic males show in different
parts of the body the alternative traits for which the mother was
heterozygous (A. R. Whiting 1934). A high proportion of the mosaic males show
feminized structures in the genitalia and more rarely in other parts (Whiting
et al. 1934). On the basis of eye color it was hypothesized that these
feminized mosaic males are mosaic for at least two sex factors. One type of
tissue contains F.g. (in the X
chromosome) and the other contains allelomorphs f.G.
(in the Y chromosome). Either recessive factor causes maleness, but G. produces some diffusible substance
which, coming in contact with tissue containing F., interacts so that feminization
results (Whiting 1933a, 1933b). Two kinds of
males were postulated, F.g. (or X) and f.G
(or Y) which are phenotypically similar. The female contains both the X and
the Y chromosomes and is, therefore, heterozygous or digametic (F.g.
/ f.G.) or (X/Y). The dominant factors present in the
two types of males are complementary to each other in producing femaleness.
Males normally have one set of autosomes (1A) while females have two sets
(2A). A female
produces from unfertilized eggs 1X + 1A and 1Y + 1A males in equal numbers.
If crossed with a 1Y + 1A male, she might be expected to produce from
fertilized eggs females 1X + 1Y + 2A and diploid males 2Y + 2A, in equal
numbers. Or, if crossed with a 1X +1A male, the diploid sons should be 2X +
2A. These formulae show that the genic ratio of X to A or of Y to A is the
same in the diploid males as in the corresponding haploid, while the female
in unlike either, being a combination of the two. Females are necessarily
diploid, for they must have both dominant factors F. and G. which are carried in separate but
homologous chromosomes. In 1943
Whiting elaborated on the above and proposed a final scheme that was worked
out by means of sex-linked mutant genes as follows: Sex
determination was shown to depend upon a series of multiple alleles, of with 9 have thus farm been identified
(Whiting 1943). These are designated as xa, xb, ... xi. Any
heterozygote (diploid), xa/xb, xa/xc, xc/xd, etc., etc., is female. Any
azygote (haploid) xa, xb, xc, etc., etc., or
homozygote (diploid), xa/xa, xb/xb, etc., etc., is male. Normal
females are heterozygous for any two alleles of a certain series, while
haploid males have any single allele, and diploid males are homozygous for
any one. The almost complete sterility of the diploid males was found to be
due to failure of the larger diploid sperm to get into the eggs (MacBride
1946). Rarely occurring triploid daughters of diploid males were also almost
completely sterile. Manning
(1949) suggested that femaleness in the honeybee is a produce of a balance
between a diploid autosome set of 30 chromosomes plus an X chromosome,
whereas maleness is an effect of a haploid autosome set of 15 chromosomes
plus an X chromosome. In the formation of a sperm, the X chromosome is
discarded so that each sperm has only a set of 15 autosomes. Schmieder
& Whiting (1947) working with Melittobia, a close-crossed chalcidid, suggested that
in haplo-diploid species multiple sex allelism may be the more primitive and general method
reproductive economy and that the close-crossed species have adapted some
other method. Melittobia is
an exception which may fit an "erroneous" scheme proposed by
Lenhossek (1903) and Godlenski (1910) for the honeybee. According to this
scheme, the female produces two types of eggs, of which only one type, the
female producing, is capable of and requires fertilization; while the other
produces males parthenogenetically. Da Cunha
& Kerr (1957) put forth the hypothesis of a series of male-determining
genes in balance with a series
of female-determining genes. The female-determining (FD) genes would be
additive in their effect, whereas the male-determining genes (MD) would not.
Sex would be determined by the relation: 2FD > MD > FD The series of
sex alleles of Bracon hebetor studied by Whiting (1943)
was interpreted as consisting of female genes which have lost the property of
determining femaleness unless heterozygous (complementary multiple alleles). Evidence for this is the fact
that Bracon triploids are
females (Torvik-Greb 1935, Inaba 1939). This hypothesis does not oppose the
multiple allele one, but is merely more general. Multiple alleles of Whiting
(1943) are interpreted as femaleness genes which lost the additive property. Laidlaw &
Tucker (1964) came out with the suggestion that female tissue in the honeybee
was derived from the union of two sperm only. Whiting
(1967) studying the pteromalid, Nasonia
vitripennis (Walker),
admitted that this species did not fit her Whiting scheme. Diploid males of
Nasonia coming only from
unfertilized eggs are fertile and their triploid daughters are more so than
the Bracon triploids. The
smaller number of chromosomes in Nasonia
(n = 5; Bracon = 10) would
provide a better chance for eggs of triploids to get the correct
representatives and correct number of chromosomes. That probability was
thought to explain their greater fertility. It may also involve the
production of smaller diploid sperms than those produced by diploid Bracon males. Larger micropylar
openings could also explain the fertility of diploid Nasonia males. Finally,
Crozier (1971) attempted to integrate all mechanisms. In the summary of his
paper, Crozier stated that sex determination in haplo-diploid animals was
explained by Whiting's scheme for two cases only, and that the daCunha and
Kerr genic-balance scheme, a more general hypothesis, tended to explain sex
determination for other species. Crozier proposed a general hypothesis based
on Snell's (1935) multiple factor suggestion. This multiple-locus hypothesis suggests that in
haplo-diploid species, sex is determined by a number of loci. Females are
heterozygous at one or more loci, while males are homozygous or hemizygous at
all sex loci. At the molecular level, this effect might be due to
female-determining properties of heteropolymers formed between the products
of different alleles at any sex locus. Homopolymers or heteropolymers between
products at different loci are not formed or lack sex-determining activity.
Haploid intersexes could arise from mutants that form active homopolymers or
active heteropolymers with products of other loci. Diploid intersexes should
be extremely rare, except in single locus species, in which intersexes could
result from mutations that reduce heteropolymer formation. The data from
a number of examples support the multiple-locus hypothesis for Hymenoptera
and haplo-diploid Acarina, but not for coccids. No suitable data exist for
other haplo-diploid groups. Compared with single locus species, those with
many sex loci will have weaker selection operating on the alleles at each
locus and will lose fewer diploids as low viability males. Crozier concluded
that testable predictions for species with many sex loci indicate that
prolonged close inbreeding should yield diploid males; that diploid
intersexes in outbred lines should be extremely rare compared with haploid
intersexes; and that feminized borders, due to complementation between
different sex alleles, should often occur between genetically different
blocks of tissue in gynoid males. Luck et al.
(1996) stated that the single-locus and multiple-locus models both predict
that diploid males will appear when hymenopteran populations are continuously
inbred. The genetic balance model does not. In the single-locus model diploid
males will occur in one or two generations of inbreeding whereas several to
many generations of continuous inbreeding are required before diploid males
will appear if the multiple-locus model applies. Crozier (1971) argued that
the absence of diploid males following inbreeding couldn't be taken as
evidence that the multiple-locus model is inapplicable because homozygosity
at some sex determining loci may be lethal. Experiments
have documented that the gender of Bracon
hebetor Say is controlled by
a single locus (Whiting 1943), with nine alleles (Whiting 1961). Also the
gender of the honey bee, Apis
mellifera L. (Woyke 1963),
some Melipona spp (Kerr
1974) and a sawfly, Neodiprion
nigroscotum Midd. (Smith
& Wallace 1971) are all determined by a single locus with several
alleles. No cases are known in which multiple loci (multiple alleles)
determine the gender (Luck et al. 1992). Some
Generalities in Arrhenotokous Reproduction
Biparental Males.--they are always much less frequent then females, and are
totally lacking when parents are unrelated. When parents are related they may
occur at a frequency of less than one percent. However, in certain rare cases
they may range to 25 percent (Bostian 1934). Biparental males never equal the
females as expected on a Mendelian basis, which is thought to be due
partially to a higher mortality among diploid males (Hase 1922, Whiting
1935). Their scarcity is largely explained by differential maturation of egg
nuclei. For example, if a Y sperm enters the egg, an X egg nucleus remains to
unite with it, other egg nuclei disintegrating and vice versa. King (1968)
gave evidence for the existence of accessory nuclei in certain hymenopteran
oocytes.
Androgenesis.--was shown in Nasonia
vitripennis by Friedler
& Ray (1951). Androgenesis is only artificially known, where radiation
inactivates the egg nucleus and the sperm nucleus dominates. In this way a
female can produce male offspring with paternate characters.
Polyploidy.--has been demonstrated in Nasonia vitripennis
by Whiting (1959, 1960a). Generally, fertilized eggs develop into females and
unfertilized eggs into males regardless of the ploidy.
The R locus.--in Nasonia
vitripennis there is a short
region on one of the five chromosomes within which there are several factors
band between which no recombination occurs. Linkage is, therefore, complete
(Whiting 1956). Incompatibility Factors.--there
are different cross incompatibility factors and differing amounts of the same
factor (Saul 1961, Whiting 1967).
Sex Intergrades.--Two kinds occur (1) gynandromorphs
and intersexes. Gynandromorphs
are often considered as genotypic
mosaics in space. The body regions differ genetically from one another
and they are mostly asymmetrical. Intersexes have been called phenotypic mosaics in time. They
start out development as one sex but change later on to the other sex or to
the possession of parts of the other sex. Intersexes are symmetrical. Other terms
used in connection with research on arrhenotoky are heterogony, which is cyclic parthenogenesis; spanandry, in which males are absent
or very rare, and endomitosis
where a doubling of the chromosome number occurs in oogonial mitosis. Functional
Aspects of Arrhenotokous Reproduction In the
biparental reproduction of females and the uniparental production of males,
Dobzhansky (1941) pointed out that (a) there may be freedom to form gene combinations
although the supply of hereditary variations is limited, and (b) that
functional haploid males provide a means for the rapid elimination of
unfavorable mutant genes if the genes that are recessive in females have
similar phenotypic effects in both sexes. In contrast,
where thelytokous reproduction is solely involved, a phylogenetic blind alley may be produced. Peacock
(1925) pointed out that in the sawflies, a group in which uniparental
reproduction is of long standing, there is a stereotype of form. Flanders
(1945) showed how arrhenotoky may arise at irregular intervals in the
population of thelytokous-reproducing insects. Kelly and Urbahns (Webster
& Phillips 1912) showed evidence with Lysiphlebus
testaceipes where a switch to uniparentalism was produced.
There is no direct field evidence for the other way except Flanders (1965)
produced an arrhenotokous laboratory population in the thelytokous encyrtid Pauridia peregrina Timberlake, and Stouthamer et al.( 1990) were
able to "cure" thelytokous
populations of their thelytoky, thereby causing a reversion to arrhenotoky. Rössler &
DeBach (1972) give convincing evidence to show that so-called thelytokous
populations may not be evolutionary blind alleys in that arrhenotokous reproduction
is assumed during certain intervals. This is probably the most detailed study
performed on a thelytokous population of parasitic Hymenoptera. Extranuclear
Inheritance and Polygenes in
Arrhenotoky Inheritance
of quantitative behavior associated with gregarious oviposition (>one
individual developed per host) and fecundity in the South American parasitoid
Muscidifurax raptorellus Kogan & Legner
(Kogan & Legner 1970) is accompanied
by some unique extranuclear influences which cause changes in the oviposition
phenotype of females (Legner 1987a ,
1987b; 1988a). Males are able to change a female's oviposition phenotype
upon mating, by transferring an unknown substance (Legner 1987a , 1988a,
1988b). Females with
the solitary genotype express gregarious oviposition behavior after mating
with males possessing the gregarious genotype, and females with the
gregarious genotype reduce the magnitude of their gregarious behavior after
mating with males of the solitary genotype. The intensity of this response is
different depending on the respective genetic composition of the mating pair
(Legner 1989a). Thus, the
genes involved, by regulating phenotypic changes in the mated female and
aggression in her larval offspring, cause partial expression of the traits
they govern shortly after insemination and before being inherited by
resulting adult progeny (Legner 1987a , 1988a, 1989a). Such genes have been called wary genes and the process by which they are inherited accretive inheritance (Legner 1989a). Maternal
inheritance of extranuclear substances as discussed by Legner (1987a ) and Corbet (1985) does not explain the passage of traits to
offspring. Observations of linear additivity of the traits and variance
changes in hybrid versus parental generations and relatively constant daily
expressions of behavior in F1 and backcrossed populations, point
to chromosomal inheritance (Legner 1988a, 1989a,c). In the
process of hybridization, wary genes may serve to quicken the pace of
evolution by allowing natural selection for nonlethal undesirable and
desirable characteristics to begin to act in the parental generation. Wary
genes detrimental to the hybrid population might thus be more prone to
elimination and beneficial ones may be expressed in the mother before the
appearance of her active progeny. If wary genes occur more generally in
Hymenoptera, their presence might account partially for the rapid evolution
thought to occur in certain groups of Hymenoptera (Hartl 1972, Gordh 1975,
1979, 743-748), and possibly the quick adaptation and spread of Africanized
honey bees in South America as discussed by Taylor (1985). As discussed
earlier, the ability to change the adult female's expression of a
quantitative character, either positively or negatively, challenges accepted
views of polygenic loci, and it may be that such loci are not in fact
inherited, but rather another group of genes which have the capability to switch on or off the loci. Such genes may influence DNA methylation of the
loci controlling oviposition behavior, as shown for other organisms (). All
polygenic loci may be perpetually present for a given quantitative trait in
all individuals of both Muscidifurax
raptorellus races, but they
are either activated or inactivated by substances under the control of
another group of genes. Further
studies in 1995 by Stouthamer et al. (unpublished) have shown the involvement
of larval cannibalism and much greater complexities in this species'
reproduction. An account may be found in <aggress.htm> Recombinant
Hymenopteran Males Some unique
considerations are required in the formation of recombinant males of
haplo-diploid breeding systems. Although normal oogenesis in arrhenotokous
Hymenoptera does not deviate from that found in diploid-diploid organisms,
hymenopteran spermatogenesis is highly modified (Crozier 1975). Because
hymenopteran males are haploid, marked modifications of spermatogenesis are
necessary to ensure that a balanced set of chromosomes is transmitted via the
sperm. The principal difference is that the first division is somewhat
abortive, with no karyokinesis, so that there is only one equational division
(Crozier 1975). In most Hymenoptera, the sperm of any one haploid male are
identical, at least in the genetic components they carry. Considering a
hymenopteran example involving only two loci in which parental cohorts are
homozygous for different alleles at each locus, the F1 generation
of females would be genetically identical and heterozygous. Assuming that the
loci in question are unlinked, each F1 female would be capable of
producing four kinds of gametes: AB,
A'B, AB' and A'B', in
equal proportions. Similarly, such virgin F1 hymenopteran females
produce four haploid and genetically distinct males from unfertilized eggs: AB, A'B, AB' and A'B'. However, 50% of these males
would be of the parental genotypes (eg., AB & A'B'), as opposed to none
of the F1 females. In this way the recombinant hymenopteran males
differ from diploid-diploid systems: there are different kinds of genotypes
depending on the number of active loci. When crossing F1 females with
males produced by that generation (a practice necessary in estimating the
number of active polygenic loci) each free-living, haploid recombinant male
produces only a single type of gamete, but among the population of males present, all gametes that are produced by
the F1 hybrid female also will be represented. However, at this
point each of the different kinds of males (four in the above example) must
have equal mating advantage, which must be guaranteed by manual random selection.
Also, where large numbers of genetic loci are involved, it is essential to
have a sufficient number of replicates to ensure that the larger number of
male genotypes are given equal statistical chance in mating. Estimations
of the Number of
Active Polygenic Loci The minimum
number of independent genes with additive effects that contribute to the
expression of a quantitative trait, such as cannibalism intensity, can be
estimated from the means and the variances of the character in the parental
cohorts, their F1 and F2 offspring, and backcrossing
data, by applying Wright's (Castle, 1921) formula: nE
= (up2 - up1)2 / (8o2s)
< n [
nE = effective number of genetic factors up1
= mean of parental cohort-1 up2
= mean of parental cohort-2 o2s
= difference in variances between compared generations (see Lande 1981) Four
estimates and their standard errors are derived from Lande's (1981) method as
follows: nE1 considers F1 and F2 variances;
nE2, the F1, F2 and P2 variances;
nE3, the F2 and first and second backcross variances;
and nE4, the F1, P1, P2 and first
and second backcross variances Assumptions
necessary for the accurate application of Wright's method enumerated by Lande
(1981) and Wright (1952) are that the two parental populations have
homologous gene sequences so that there is no post-mating reproductive
isolation due to chromosomal rearrangements; any number and frequencies of
alleles are allowed at each locus within the parental populations; and the
loci or segregating factors are not linked and in random combination in each
parental population, with no significant selection during the experiment.
Also, all mating individuals must be chosen at random from the respective
populations, and there is semi-dominance at all loci, which all make equal
contributions (Wright 1968). Analysis Scale.--the scales for analysis should guarantee additivity of the
mean phenotypes in F1, F2 and backcross populations,
and there should be a linearity of P1, F1 and P2 variances
when plotted against their means, with the extra variance segregating in
backcross populations being about half that in the F2 (Lande
1981). The best
scale for analysis is one on which the effects of both genetic and
environmental factors are as nearly additive as possible, although because of
a complex of genetic and environmental factors, these effects are in general
not additive (Wright 1968). However, whenever interaction effects exist,
there is no single transformation that satisfies all available criteria of
additivity.
Transformations for the data may be selected with the procedure
outlined in Wright (1968) as follows: Standard deviations are regressed in
terms of means among inbred, presumably isogenic, parental cohorts and their
F1's in order to derive a regression formula Y = a + bx. Then the relationship
a/b suggests the transformation function. Coefficient
of Heritability Two methods
may be employed to estimate the coefficient of heritability, which is the ratio
of the additive genetic variance to the phenotypic variance. The first method
considers heritability in the broad
sense (H), and assumes that inbred parents and the F1 are
genetically homogeneous, so that all variance observed therein is due to
environmental influence. Averaging the variances for one female and the F1
derives an overall value for environmental variance. This value subtracted
from the total variances, represented by the F2 variance, gives an
estimate of genetic variance. Then genetic variance divided by total variance
estimates heritability (Goodenough 1984). Standard errors of H may be
calculated with Tukey's Jackknife method, explained in Sokal & Rohlf (1981).
These estimates measure the extent to which individual differences in the population
are due to differences in genotype. They represent all the genotypic variance
including the additive, dominance and epistatic kind. Estimates may
also be made of heritability in the narrow
sense (h2) by regressing expressions of behavior of female
offspring on one of the female parents (Falconer 1981, Owen 1989). The
covariance is then computed from the cross-products of the paired values.
Covariance is then divided by the variance among the parental females and
this value is doubled for an estimate of h2 (see Owen 1989 and
Hellmich, et al. for hymenopteran breeding systems). Because
dominance can influence estimates of gene number by distorting the expression
of the phenotype, the various hybrid and backcross cohorts must be examined
for its presence. The dominance level (D) in F1 progeny may be estimated
using the index of Stone (1968), which was derived for single loci, but has
been used in polygenic systems (Raymond et al. 1986). the P <0.05 confidence limits can
be derived from formulae in Misra (1968). The parameter "D" may
vary linearly from +1, indicating complete dominance, to -1 indicating
complete recessivity, and 0 indicating perfect codominance. Stone's (1968)
formula: D = (2 log F1 - log P1 - log P2 /
(log P1 - log P2) Some
Generalities in Thelytokous Reproduction Thelytoky is
not common among animals, and White (1984) estimated that only 1,500 records
are known. Thelytoky was reviewed for Hymenoptera by Phillips (1903),
Winckler (1920), Vandel (1928), Clausen (1942), Slobodchikoff & Daly
(1971) and Crozier (1975), where about 100 cases are known. Recently
Stouthamer (1990) showed that at least 270 reported cases exist in Hymenoptera,
not including the 2,000 cases of cyclic thelytoky found in Cynipoidea
(Herbert 1987). Luck et al.
(1996) stated that thelytoky is much more prevalent than generally thought.
The family Aphelinidae shows a large percentage of the species with thelytokous
populations. DeBach (1969) observed that the genus Aphytis had 30% of its species demonstrating this mode of
reproduction and the family Signiforidae showed 40%. Causes of
thelytoky are not always generally well understood. Two possible genetic
mechanisms may lead to thelytoky. Thelytoky as a simple mendelian or
polygenic trait, or thelytoky resulting from epistatic interactions between
genes (Luck et al. 1996). Little information exists on the genetic causes of
thelytoky, hybridization leading to thelytoky may be caused by epistatic
interactions between genes. Thelytoky as a simple recessive mendelian gene
has been indicated to occur in the Cape honey bee Aphis mellifera
carpensis Ersholtz, although
Kerr (1962) reported that thelytoky in that species is not that simple. Hybridization
leading to thelytoky has been reported twice in Trichogramma. Nagarkatti (1970) crossed a female of Trichogramma perkinsi Girault with T. californicum Nagaraja & Nagarkatti male. This cross produced
17 offspring in the F1 generation. One of the females was
thelytokous and the other seven females were arrhenotokous. A similar example
was reported by Pintureau & Babault (1981). In crosses between T. evanescens Westwood and T. maidis
Pintureau & Voegelé the F1 hybrid females reproduced by
thelytoky. Their F2 offspring reproduced by arrhenotoky, however.
Hybrid induced thelytoky has also been reported in Muscidifurax raptor
Girault & Sanders (Legner 1987a ,1987b). Hybridization increased levels of tychoparthenogenesis
(occasional production of female offspring from unfertilized eggs) in Bracon hebetor (Ashmead) (Speicher 1934). Luck et al.
(1996) refer to an unusual case of thelytoky induction in the Aphidius colemani complex (Tardieux & Rabelasse 1988).
Thelytoky was induced in certain cases when males attempted matings with
females from different geographic locations. Electrophoretic observations
with females that were not inseminated by these males showed that the female
offspring of the "cross" had indeed the maternal genotype. Typically,
the genus Muscidifurax,
attacking synanthropic Diptera, also shows completely parthenogenetic modes
of reproduction in some geographically isolated populations. In Muscidifurax thelytoky is
automictic which includes meiosis and the process of endomitosis, or
endopolyploidy, where chromosomes are duplicated without division of the
nucleus, resulting in increased chromosome number within a cell. Chromosome
strands separate but the cell does not divide. Endomitosis in M. uniraptor Kogan & Legner has been observed to occur as
late as the 2nd cleavage stage in eggs that were already deposited in the
host (Legner 1987a ,1987b). In the
studies on Aphytis mytilaspidis by Rössler &
DeBach (1972a,b; 1973), it was shown that thelytokous forms of Hymenoptera
are not completely reproductive isolated from sibling arrhenotokous forms.
The greatest barrier to interbreeding seemed to be the precopulation period,
where arrhenotokous males spent a greater length of time in courtship with
thelytokous females. There was a tendency for the thelytokous form to be
replaced entirely by arrhenotokous forms in the long run; and persistence of
thelytoky seemed dependent on the hybrids finding suitable environmental
conditions, such as host type. in Muscidifurax,
thelytoky may be transferred to an arrhenotokous population in two ways: (1)
by mating adventitious males from a thelytokous population to virgin hybrid
females of an arrhenotokous population and (2) by backcrossing a hybrid
female of interhemispheric origins to males of one of the original parents
(Legner 1987a ,1987b). The first method is apt to be more successful than the
second one. However, the second method fits the pattern most often ascribed
to the origin of thelytoky in animals: hybridization between two related
bisexual species. The question
of whether only chromosomal inheritance is involved in the acquisition of
thelytoky in Hymenoptera is uncertain, and there is mounting evidence to
suggest that the process may also include extrachromosomal phenomena (Legner 1987a ,1987b; Stouthamer 1989, Stouthamer et al. 1990, 1993). Although
adventitious males from thelytokous populations may simply transmit a
dominant nuclear gene for thelytoky, there is also the possibility that
thelytoky could involve infection by microorganisms found in the reproductive
tract. Such organisms or their products would be capable of initiating the
endomitotic process, resulting in parthenogenetic female offspring. There is an
apparent relationship to the titre of the causative factor in thelytoky. For
example, production of thelytokous females in M. uniraptor
is greatest when oviposition is interrupted for 24 hours by scheduling host
presentation on alternate days or by slowing oviposition rates during early
adult life. Such interferences allow the titre of the factor to rise. Higher
concentrations of microorganisms may thus guarantee a greater proportion of
thelytokous female offspring. It could reasonably be assumed that
microorganisms and certain chemicals produced by them are involved, with the
latter inducing endomitosis. Heat
treatment (32B C for >24 hr) beginning at a critical stage in oocyte
formation, blocks endomitosis and male progeny result. If any enzymes,
microorganisms or both were involved directly or indirectly in promoting
endomitosis, the prolonged exposure to higher temperatures could kill or
inactivate them. Some work points to their probable residence in or near
oocytes which are in later developmental stages. Such
observations tend to preclude a wholly genetic aspect to thelytoky. If, for
example, microorganisms and accompanying chemicals, or inducing enzymes which
they produce, are transferred to the developing ova, endomitosis might be
influenced in the next generation, and thelytoky would be passed on without
genetic change. With such a system it is possible to envision quantitative
variation in microorganisms and enzymes and hence the number of thelytokous
females produced. Because the titre appears to build up during host-free
periods, microorganismal multiplication and/or elaboration of the chemical
substances would have to proceed relatively slowly. The possibility might be
considered that in the presence of a gene for thelytoky, microorganisms may
play a role in directing cytological processes towards a production of
parthenogenetic females.
Microorganisms involved in the production of thelytoky have been
identified molecularly by Stouthamer et al. (1993). They comment that
inherited microorganisms are widespread in insects, having been implicated as
causes of female parthenogenesis and cytoplasmic incompatibility. Normal
sexual reproduction can be restored by treatment with antibiotics. Sequence
analysis of the DNA encoding 16S ribosomal RNA show that cytoplasmic
incompatibility bacteria from diverse insect taxa are closely related,
sharing 95% sequence similarity. They belong to the alpha subdivision of
Proteobacteria. Stouthamer et al. (1993) show that parthenogenesis-associated
bacteria from parasitoid Hymenoptera fall into this bacterial group, having
up to 99% sequence similarity to some incompatibility microorganisms. Both
incompatibility and parthenogenesis microorganisms alter host chromosome
behavior during early mitotic division in the egg. Incompatibility bacteria
act by interfering with paternal chromosome incorporation in fertilized eggs,
while parthenogenesis bacteria prevent segregation of chromosomes in
unfertilized eggs. These traits are adaptive for the microorganisms. Judging
from their sequence similarities, Stouthamer et al. (1993) concluded that
parthenogenesis bacteria and cytoplasmic incompatibility bacteria form a
monophyletic group of microorganisms that specialize in manipulating
chromosome behavior and insect reproduction. Consequences of Thelytoky.--Luck et al.
(1996) summarized the outcomes of thelytokous reproduction. They point out
that (1) females do not have to mate to produce female offspring and (2) all
the offspring of thelytokous females are female. The first difference gives
thelytokous females an advantage whenever their arrhenotokous counterparts
are not able to find males (Tomlinson 1966, Gerritsen 1980, Cornell 1988).,
Assuming that thelytokous females are equally as fecund as their
arrhenotokous counterparts, the second difference leads to a higher intrinsic
rate of increase in thelytokous compared with arrhenotokous females
(Timberlake & Clausen 1924, Vet & van Lenteren 1981). In studies
where the fecundity of thelytokous populations are compared with
arrhenotokous populations, the results are not always as expected, however.
Smith (1941) found that thelytokous females of the spruce sawfly Diprion polynotum Ht. produce about a third of the offspring
produced by arrhenotokous females. There was some question here whether both
were actually of the same species, however. In work by Rössler & DeBach
(1972, 1973) on Aphytis mytilaspidis (LeBaron), males
from an arrhenotokous population were mated with females from a thelytokous
population, and the hybrid offspring formed differed in their host
preference. The thelytokous strain preferred Latania scale, Hemiberlesia lataniae (Sign.) and the
arrhenotokous strain preferred cactus scale, Diapis echinocacti
(Bouche). The number of offspring produced by the thelytokous strain was less
on cactus scale while on Latania scale it was more (15 / 22 vs 12/0.89,
respectively). Stouthamer (1989) compared the offspring production of
thelytokous lines and arrhenotokous lines that had been derived from them by
antibiotic treatment of Trichogramma
deion and T. pretiosum. The results indicated that in all cases the
total offspring production of the arrhenotokous line was significantly higher
than that of the thelytokous line. Legner & Gerling (1967) comparing host-fed and host-deprived Muscidifurax uniraptor
Kogan & Legner cultures found that the host-deprived females had a higher
fecundity. Exercise 16.1--Discuss how arrhenotoky was first discovered. Exercise 16.2--Be able to discuss in detail the various hypotheses
proposed for sex determination in arrhenotokous arthropods. Exercise 16.3--Describe the following: biparental males,
androgenesis, polyploidy, sex intergrades. Exercise 16.4--Compare the functional aspects of arrhenotoky with
thelytoky. Exercise 16.5--In a hypothetical case, Bracon hebetor
is imported to America from Europe for the biological control of an invaded
lepidopterous pest. In its native home B.
hebetor is shown to be
responsible for the extremely low density of the pest in question. However,
in America only partial control was achieved. Basic studies revealed that (1)
the sex ratio of B. hebetor in America averages
only 20% females while in Europe it averages 80% females; and (2) experiment
station reports show that the original culture of the parasitoid was obtained
from a single mated female in Europe. What
might be wrong with the population of B.
hebetor in America? What
could be done to correct the situation and possibly attain a higher degree of
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