
Ant Role-Switching Unveils Ancient Social Blueprint
Leafcutter ant colonies, celebrated for their rigid division of labour, have yielded a startling secret: their roles can be rewired with a molecular tweak. Scientists from the University of Pennsylvania orchestrated this transformation using two tiny neuropeptides, shifting defenders into nurses and garden workers into leaf harvesters. The work, published in Cell on 9 June 2025, reveals a mechanism conserved across species, reaching mammals such as naked mole-rats—suggesting a 600‑million‑year‑old evolutionary blueprint guiding social organisation.
Research led by Daniel S. Och Penn Integrates Knowledge University Professor Shelley L. Berger focused on the neurochemistry of division of labour in Atta cephalotes, a leafcutter ant species. In these highly structured societies, ants specialise very early, with larger Majors guarding the colony, Media ants gathering leaves, and smaller Minims managing fungal gardens and caring for brood. By altering the levels of crustacean cardioactive peptide and neuroparsin‑A, researchers caused dramatic behavioural shifts: upping CCAP induced gardeners and defenders to start harvesting leaves, while reducing NPA in Majors triggered caregiving instincts.
Genetic knockdown and direct peptide injections produced rapid behavioural reassignments, echoed by transcriptomic profiles aligning with the new roles. Media ants treated with CCAP began leaf‑harvesting patterns typical of their subcaste, confirmed by gene‑expression pathways linked to foraging. Similarly, Majors with reduced NPA exhibited brood‑care behaviours and corresponding gene‑expression patterns.
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What makes this finding truly remarkable is its cross‑species resonance. Molecular signatures that defined ant behaviour corresponded with those observed in Heterocephalus glaber, the naked mole‑rat—another eusocial species with task‑based worker castes. The parallel suggests that neuropeptide‑driven social regulation may trace back to a common ancestor deep in evolutionary history. 'We were amazed to see the apparent similarity of gene regulation between nurses and foragers of ants compared to naked mole‑rat mammals,' Berger said, noting that these parallels were unexpected given the vast evolutionary gulf.
The study also hints at deeper biological links, particularly regarding insulin signalling and longevity. Leafcutter ant expression patterns showed interplay with insulin pathways previously associated with lifespan control. Naked mole‑rats are known for exceptional longevity, often living beyond 37 years—almost unheard of in rodents—and for their cancer resistance and negligible ageing.
Members of Berger's team, including Michael B. Gilbert and Karl M. Glastad, emphasised the role of these neuropeptides as modulators rather than executors of behaviour. Their study, based on rigorous gene expression analyses from both ants and naked mole‑rats, pointed to a convergent evolution model: similar molecular tools repurposed by different species to achieve comparable social complexity.
Behavioural plasticity within ant castes was previously explored by examining epigenetic factors and brain structure. Yet, this experiment demonstrates that acute chemical manipulation can override morphological predispositions, offering a dramatic proof of role reversibility in one of nature's most disciplined societies. The findings imply latent flexibility—ants may be much more dynamic in their roles than previously believed.
Experts note that while role switching in ants may feel ethically distant, the insights have broader ramifications. Neuropeptides are key regulators in diverse taxa, humans included. For instance, oxytocin in humans influences parental care; the ant study opens questions about universal behavioural circuits shaped by peptides. A deeper understanding of these molecular circuits could eventually inform approaches to social behaviour disorders or age‑related decline.
However, some caution that translating findings from invertebrates and subterranean rodents to humans is premature. Neuropeptide systems and brain architectures vary widely. Moreover, nudging behaviour with peptide injections in controlled lab settings does not equate to social engineering in complex natural environments.
Still, the implications are profound. The discovery of CCAP and NPA as behavioural switches not only rewrites our understanding of ant societies but also challenges our notions of how ancient molecular codes govern social life. It invites a reevaluation of social evolution, suggesting that similar neurochemical pathways could underlie task allocation in humans, mammals, insects—and maybe even further back in the tree of life.
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Arabian Post
2 days ago
- Arabian Post
Ant Role-Switching Unveils Ancient Social Blueprint
Leafcutter ant colonies, celebrated for their rigid division of labour, have yielded a startling secret: their roles can be rewired with a molecular tweak. Scientists from the University of Pennsylvania orchestrated this transformation using two tiny neuropeptides, shifting defenders into nurses and garden workers into leaf harvesters. The work, published in Cell on 9 June 2025, reveals a mechanism conserved across species, reaching mammals such as naked mole-rats—suggesting a 600‑million‑year‑old evolutionary blueprint guiding social organisation. Research led by Daniel S. Och Penn Integrates Knowledge University Professor Shelley L. Berger focused on the neurochemistry of division of labour in Atta cephalotes, a leafcutter ant species. In these highly structured societies, ants specialise very early, with larger Majors guarding the colony, Media ants gathering leaves, and smaller Minims managing fungal gardens and caring for brood. By altering the levels of crustacean cardioactive peptide and neuroparsin‑A, researchers caused dramatic behavioural shifts: upping CCAP induced gardeners and defenders to start harvesting leaves, while reducing NPA in Majors triggered caregiving instincts. Genetic knockdown and direct peptide injections produced rapid behavioural reassignments, echoed by transcriptomic profiles aligning with the new roles. Media ants treated with CCAP began leaf‑harvesting patterns typical of their subcaste, confirmed by gene‑expression pathways linked to foraging. Similarly, Majors with reduced NPA exhibited brood‑care behaviours and corresponding gene‑expression patterns. ADVERTISEMENT What makes this finding truly remarkable is its cross‑species resonance. Molecular signatures that defined ant behaviour corresponded with those observed in Heterocephalus glaber, the naked mole‑rat—another eusocial species with task‑based worker castes. The parallel suggests that neuropeptide‑driven social regulation may trace back to a common ancestor deep in evolutionary history. 'We were amazed to see the apparent similarity of gene regulation between nurses and foragers of ants compared to naked mole‑rat mammals,' Berger said, noting that these parallels were unexpected given the vast evolutionary gulf. The study also hints at deeper biological links, particularly regarding insulin signalling and longevity. Leafcutter ant expression patterns showed interplay with insulin pathways previously associated with lifespan control. Naked mole‑rats are known for exceptional longevity, often living beyond 37 years—almost unheard of in rodents—and for their cancer resistance and negligible ageing. Members of Berger's team, including Michael B. Gilbert and Karl M. Glastad, emphasised the role of these neuropeptides as modulators rather than executors of behaviour. Their study, based on rigorous gene expression analyses from both ants and naked mole‑rats, pointed to a convergent evolution model: similar molecular tools repurposed by different species to achieve comparable social complexity. Behavioural plasticity within ant castes was previously explored by examining epigenetic factors and brain structure. Yet, this experiment demonstrates that acute chemical manipulation can override morphological predispositions, offering a dramatic proof of role reversibility in one of nature's most disciplined societies. The findings imply latent flexibility—ants may be much more dynamic in their roles than previously believed. Experts note that while role switching in ants may feel ethically distant, the insights have broader ramifications. Neuropeptides are key regulators in diverse taxa, humans included. For instance, oxytocin in humans influences parental care; the ant study opens questions about universal behavioural circuits shaped by peptides. A deeper understanding of these molecular circuits could eventually inform approaches to social behaviour disorders or age‑related decline. However, some caution that translating findings from invertebrates and subterranean rodents to humans is premature. Neuropeptide systems and brain architectures vary widely. Moreover, nudging behaviour with peptide injections in controlled lab settings does not equate to social engineering in complex natural environments. Still, the implications are profound. The discovery of CCAP and NPA as behavioural switches not only rewrites our understanding of ant societies but also challenges our notions of how ancient molecular codes govern social life. It invites a reevaluation of social evolution, suggesting that similar neurochemical pathways could underlie task allocation in humans, mammals, insects—and maybe even further back in the tree of life.


Gulf Today
08-06-2025
- Gulf Today
Man's extreme snake bite trials boost new antivenom research hope
Tim Friede was feeling particularly down on the day after the Sept.11 attacks, so he went to his basement and let two of the world's deadliest snakes bite him. Four days later, he woke up from a coma. "I know what it feels like to die from snakebite," Friede told AFP via video call from his home in the small US town of Two Rivers, Wisconsin. This experience might put most people off snakes entirely, but Friede simply vowed to be more careful next time. From 2000 to 2018, he allowed himself to be bitten by snakes more than 200 times. He also injected himself with their venom over 650 times. Friede endured this pain because he wanted to achieve total immunity to venom, a practice called mithridatism which should not be tried at home. Tim Friede can be seen with a snake in this undated image. Instagrm photo After a couple of years, Friede started to believe he could be the basis for a better kind of antivenom. The former truck mechanic, who does not have a university degree, long struggled to be taken seriously by scientists. But last month, a study published in the prestigious Cell journal showed that antibodies from his blood protect against a range of snake venom. The researchers now hope Friede's hyper-immunity could even lead to the development of a universal antivenom. This would fill a major need, because currently most antivenoms only cover one or a few of the world's 600 venomous snakes. Up to 138,000 people are killed by snakebites a year, while 400,000 suffer amputations or other disabilities, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). These figures are believed to be vastly underestimated because snakebite victims typically live in poorer, remote areas. 'Pain every time' Friede's first bite was from a harmless garter snake when he was five years old. "I was afraid, I cried, I ran away," said Friede, now 57. Then he started bringing snakes home and hiding them in pickle jars. His mother sought counselling, but his interest in snakes persisted. Things escalated after Friede attended a class that taught him how to "milk" snakes for their venom. How antivenom is made has changed little over the last 125 years. Small doses of snake venom are injected into animals such as horses, which produce antibodies that can be extracted and used as antivenom. However this antivenom usually only works for bites from that particular species of snake — and it includes other antibodies from horse that can cause serious side-effects including anaphylactic shock. "I thought, well, if they make antivenom in horses, why can't I just use myself as a primate?" Friede said. He started working through the venom from all the deadly species he could get his hands on, such as cobras, taipans, black mambas and rattlesnakes. "There is pain every time," he said. Antibodies For years, the scientists he contacted to take advantage of his immunity refused to bite. Then in 2017, immunologist Jacob Glanville, who previously worked on universal vaccines, turned his attention towards antivenom. Glanville told AFP he had been looking for "a clumsy snake researcher who'd been bit accidentally a couple times," when he came across a video of Friede taking brutal back-to-back snake bites. When they first spoke, Glanville said he told Friede: "I know this is awkward, but I would love to get my hands on some of your blood." "I've been waiting for this call for a long time," came the response, Glanville said. The antivenom described in the Cell paper includes two antibodies from Friede's blood, as well as a drug called varespladib. It offered mice full protection against 13 of the 19 snake species tested, and partial protection for the remaining six. The researchers hope a future cocktail will cover far more snakes — particularly vipers — with further trials planned on dogs in Australia. Timothy Jackson of the Australian Venom Research Unit praised the immunological research, but questioned whether a human needed to be involved, pointing to synthetically developed antibodies. 'Proud' Glanville said the ultimate goal of his US-based firm Centivax was to develop a universal antivenom administered by something like an EpiPen, potentially produced in India to keep the costs down. Friede said he was "proud" to have made a "small difference" in medical history. Now working for Centivax, Friede stopped self-inflicting himself with venom in 2018 to save the firm from liability issues. But he hopes to get bitten by snakes again in the future. "I do miss it," he said. Agence France-Presse


Al Etihad
24-05-2025
- Al Etihad
Scientists develop contact lenses that let humans see near-infrared light
24 May 2025 10:20 ABU DHABI (ALETIHAD)An international team led by Chinese scientists has developed revolutionary contact lenses that allow humans to see near-infrared light, a breakthrough that could transform medical imaging and visual assistance study, published in the journal Cell on Thursday, combines visual neuroscience with rare earth elements to create transparent, wearable lenses that convert invisible infrared light into visible human eye only detects light with wavelengths between 400 and 700 nanometers, thus missing much of nature's information. Near-infrared light, with wavelengths between 700 and 2,500 nanometers, excels at penetrating biological tissue with minimal radiation researchers from the University of Science and Technology of China, Fudan University, and the University of Massachusetts Medical School engineered rare earth elements that transform three different infrared wavelengths into red, green and blue visible scientists in the team developed a nanomaterial that, when injected into animal retinas, enabled mammals to see near-infrared light naturally. Since retinal injections aren't practical for humans, they started to design a wearable, non-invasive alternative using soft contact team modified the surface of the rare earth nanoparticles, enabling them to be dispersed in polymer solutions, and ultimately fabricate highly transparent contact lenses, according to the volunteers wearing the lenses could identify infrared patterns, temporal codes and even distinguish three different "colors" of infrared light, essentially expanding the human visual spectrum beyond its natural non-invasive technology has potential applications in medical imaging, information security, rescue operations, and treating color blindness. Unlike night vision goggles, the lenses, capable of enhancing vision in low-visibility conditions such as fog or dust, require no power source and provide a more natural visual experience. While still at the proof-of-concept stage, the researchers believe the technology could eventually help people with visual impairments, and revolutionise how humans interact with the invisible light spectrum. Source: Aletihad - Abu Dhabi