Ants live in crowded nests with interacting individuals, which makes them particularly prone to infectious diseases. The question
is, How do ants cope with the increased risk of pathogen transmission due to sociality? We have studied the molecular evolution
of
defensin, a gene encoding an antimicrobial protein, in ants.
Defensin sequences from several ant species were analyzed with maximum likelihood models of codon substitution to infer selection.
Positive selection was detected in the mature region of defensin, whereas the signal and pro regions seem to be evolving neutrally.
We also found a significantly higher rate of nonsynonymous substitutions in some phylogenetic lineages, as well as
d
N
/d
S
> 1, suggesting varying selection pressures in different lineages. Earlier studies on the molecular evolution of insect antimicrobial
peptide genes have focused on termites and dipteran species, and detected positive selection only in duplicated
termicin genes in termites. These findings, together with our present results, provide an indication that the immune systems of social
insects (ants and termites) and dipteran insects may have responded differently to the selection pressure caused by microbial
pathogens.
Keywords Defensin - Immune gene - Ant - Social insect - Positive selection - Hymenoptera -
Formica