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I am a clone. That is, I am a colony of cells that developed from a single fertilized
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egg cell. Most animals are clones like me. It is a slight oversimplification to say that
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all of an animal's cells are genetically identical to each other. Some cells have
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mutations. In mammals, some cells (red blood cells) lack a nuclear genome entirely. Some
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cells have viruses—and when it's in a cell, a virus is basically a gene—that other cells
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lack. But a typical animal is a clone in the sense that all its cells arise from that
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single fertilized egg cell.
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Not all animals, however, are clones. Sometimes two tiny embryos developing inside their
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mother will fuse together into a single embryo and continue developing. The resulting
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animal is not a clone, but a chimera: a conglomeration of two different cell lineages into
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a single organism. Some species of monkeys (marmosets) typically have chimeric blood, from
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having shared a blood supply with a twin in utero (Haig 1999), and rare cases of accidental
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chimerism are known from many animal species (Tremblay and Caltagirone 1973; van Dijk et
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al. 1996). In marine invertebrates, chimeric individuals often arise from the fusion of
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individuals later in development (Buss 1987). Here I want to draw attention to a remarkable
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form of chimerism found in armored scale insects. These insects (Figure 1) always develop
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not from a single fertilized egg but from two genetically different cells. One of these
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cells develops into a special organ (the bacteriome, which houses symbiotic bacteria) that
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has a nuclear genome different from that found in the rest of the body.
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Obligate chimerism—the presence of two genetically distinct cell lineages in every
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individual at each life stage—is found in a few families of scale insects, but nowhere else
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in nature. The avid naturalist wants to understand this sort of deep oddity for its own
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sake, but such understanding might have broader implications as well. For instance,
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although humans are not usually chimeras, we do have a quasi-chimeric phase in our life
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cycle: pregnancy. Some diseases of pregnancy are apparently due to conflicts between the
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genetically nonidentical tissues of mother and fetus (Haig 2002). And the main things that
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humans eat are also quasi-chimeras: the seeds of flowering plants. In a grain of wheat, for
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instance, the germ, the endosperm, and the bran have three different nuclear genomes, and
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the conflicts between them may be similar in some ways to the conflicts seen in human
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pregnancy (Alleman and Doctor 2000; Santiago and Goodrich 2000). Ultimately, we might learn
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something about the general principles of conflict and cooperation between maternal and
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embryonic tissues that govern these cases if we can understand the uniquely stable and
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intimate chimerism of armored scale insects.
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Two Different Cell Lineages
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In all sexual animals and plants, production of an egg cell involves meiosis, the
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complex cellular process (involving DNA replication, recombination, and two nuclear
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divisions) whereby one diploid nucleus (with two copies of each chromosome) becomes four
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genetically different haploid nuclei (each with one copy of each chromosome). Only one of
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these four haploid nuclei becomes the egg cell (oocyte). In ordinary animals, the other
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three nuclei (the polar bodies) degenerate—they never divide again and are lost or
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destroyed—and the oocyte is the single maternal cell that (after fusion with a single
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paternal cell, the spermatocyte) develops into the embryo. But in armored scales, the polar
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bodies fuse together into a triploid cell (with three copies of each chromosome), and this
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triploid cell also winds up in the embryo (Figure 2). The triploid cell derived from the
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polar bodies fuses with one cell from the embryo to become a pentaploid cell (with five
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copies of each chromosome). This pentaploid cell then proliferates to form the bacteriome
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of the embryo (Brown 1965). Each cell in the bacteriome thus contains two copies of the
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mother's complete genome, in addition to the same haploid paternal genome as the rest of
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the embryo. In contrast, the rest of the embryo contains just one copy of half of the
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mother's genome. The apparent function of the bacteriome is to house intracellular
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bacteria. During embryonic development, bacteria move from the mother's bacteriome into the
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cells of the embryo's bacteriome. The precise role of the bacteria is not known, but it is
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thought that they synthesize essential nutrients (Tremblay 1990), as they do in scale
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insects' close relatives, the aphids (Shigenobu et al. 2000).
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Now the story gets even stranger. If the individual is a male, then the genetic
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difference between his bacteriome and the rest of his tissues becomes even greater as he
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develops. This is because most armored scale insects have an unusual genetic system called
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embryonic paternal genome elimination (Herrick and Seger 1999). In males, the paternal
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genome is completely eliminated from most tissues very early in development—but it is never
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eliminated from the bacteriome. As a result, most of a male armored scale insect's tissues
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(including his sperm) have one copy of half of the mother's genome (the same genome as the
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oocyte from which he developed), but his bacteriome has two complete copies of the mother's
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genome and also has a paternal genome. Thus, 60% (three of five) of the gene copies in the
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male's bacteriome are absent from the rest of the male (Figure 2).
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Chimerism and Sibling Rivalry
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What could possibly be going on here? Why should scale insects, of all creatures, have
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obligate chimerism involving activated polar bodies? Essentially, we have no idea, largely
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because no one has even ventured a serious guess. When the phenomena were discovered, early
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in the 20th century, the theoretical tools for making sense of them were unavailable. One
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such tool is W. D. Hamilton's (1964a) theory of inclusive fitness, which holds that the
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degree of cooperation between two organisms (or tissues) must depend upon their degree of
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genetic relatedness. But the rise of Hamiltonian thinking coincided with the eclipse of
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classical cytogenetics in favor of the molecular biology of model organisms, and these
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remarkable little chimeras have languished in undeserved obscurity. Perhaps merely by
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looking at them with a modern eye, we can turn up some plausible hypotheses.
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Consider the special theoretical difficulty posed by chimerism between tissues derived
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from the oocyte and those derived from the polar bodies ejected by it during meiosis. Two
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siblings will typically exhibit some degree of sibling rivalry—their interests are not
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identical. If an individual were a chimera comprising full-sibling tissues (identical
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across approximately half of their genomes), there might be conflict between the two
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nonidentical cell lineages, as there is between the tissues of a mother mammal and her
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fetus (also identical across half of their genomes) during pregnancy (Haig 2002). This may
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explain why obligate sibling chimerism never evolves (except perhaps in the very limited
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case of blood cells between sibling marmosets). But the problem of cooperation between
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tissues that derive from the oocyte and those that derive from the polar bodies is, if
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anything, even greater. The oocyte and the polar bodies are
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less closely related than two siblings would be, because the polar bodies
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are enriched for chromosome regions
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not present in the oocyte.
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If there were no crossing over between homologous chromosomes during meiosis, then the
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first meiotic division would consistently separate the chromosomes derived from the
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mother's mother from the chromosomes derived from the mother's father, producing two cells
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that are not related to each other
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at all (or, more precisely, exactly as closely related to each other as
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the mother's mother was to the mother's father). Crossing over prevents this, creating a
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mosaic of related and unrelated chromosome regions between the products of the first
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meiotic division and uncertain relationships between the final four meiotic products.
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Nonetheless, the consistently depressed relatedness between the oocyte and the polar bodies
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may help to explain why polar bodies are almost always eliminated—sibling rivalry might be
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even greater if some siblings were derived from each other's polar bodies.
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Towards an Explanation
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So how and why did two families of scale insects tame and domesticate their potentially
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fractious polar bodies, rather than killing them like normal animals do? There are at least
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three lines of thinking that seem promising for unraveling this mystery.
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Histological eusociality and relatedness.
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There are interesting parallels between, on the one hand, the chimerism seen in
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armored scale insects and, on the other hand, the eusociality (true sociality) seen in
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ants and honeybees. In ants and honeybees, sterile individuals (workers) provide
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nutrition to their potentially fertile siblings. In armored scale insects, a genetically
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distinct but ultimately sterile cell lineage (the bacteriome) provides nutrition to its
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potentially fertile “sibling” cell lineage (the rest of the scale insect)—though, of
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course, polar body-derived cells are “sibling” in a strange special sense. Like ants and
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bees, armored scale insects are effectively haplodiploid: males transmit only the
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chromosomes they inherited from their mother, and all of a male's sperm are identical to
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each other. This “clonality” of sperm boosts the relatedness between sisters, and
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Hamilton (1964b) pointed out that this high relatedness can explain the high level of
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cooperation between sisters seen in eusocial ants and honeybees. High levels of
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cooperation between sisters have since been found in haplodiploid thrips as well (Crespi
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1992). It is tempting to speculate that similar explanations can be applied to
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“histological eusociality” seen in the cooperation between related tissues in scale
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insects.
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This temptation increases when we consider another case from the old cytogenetics
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literature of apparent histological eusociality, though not of true permanent chimerism.
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This occurs in a few families of parasitoid wasps (Tremblay and Caltagirone 1973; Strand
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and Grbic 1997), in which cells derived from polar bodies form a membrane around the
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yolkless egg that is deposited in the wasp's insect host (which is often a scale
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insect!). Similar to the worker ant and the scale insect bacteriome, this membrane is
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thought to mediate nutrition of the developing embryo, and, similar to ants, honeybees,
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and scale insects, these wasps are haplodiploid.
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But although it is tempting to conclude that haplodiploidy plays the same role in
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promoting histological eusociality as it does in promoting organismal eusociality, the
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temptation should probably be resisted. In the case of the parasitoid wasps, the polar
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body-derived tissue has no paternal genome, so the clonality of sperm cannot boost its
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relatedness to anything. In the case of armored scale insect chimerism, the bacteriome
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does have a copy of the paternal genome, and that copy is identical to the paternal
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genome in the rest of the embryo, so in that sense the two tissues do have a high
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relatedness similar to the high relatedness of full siblings under haplodiploidy. But the
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scale insect bacteriome gets its copy of the paternal genome directly from the embryo, so
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the clonality of sperm (the source of elevated relatedness between haplodiploid sisters)
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apparently has nothing to do with it. Some other explanation is probably needed.
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Maternal interests.
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Note that, whatever the relationship between the polar body-derived tissues and the
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rest of the insect, the polar bodies contain the mother's complete genome. And while your
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polar bodies may be
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less related to you, on average, than your siblings are, they are
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more related to your siblings (and, of course, to your mother) than
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they are to you! Perhaps the polar bodies function to somehow enforce some maternal or
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family interest, nipping in the bud some sibling rivalry that would otherwise suppress
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the family's fitness. In haplodiploid groups, females are more closely related to their
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full sisters (with whom they share three-quarters of their gene copies) than to their
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brothers (with whom they share only one-quarter of their gene copies). So if there is
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competition between siblings for resources, females are expected to behave more
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antagonistically towards brothers and more cooperatively towards sisters. In contrast, a
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female is equally related to a son as she is to a daughter (each carries half of her gene
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copies). These asymmetries in relatedness lead to struggles in haplodiploid social
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groups, with a mother seeking to direct more resources towards sons and with sisters
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seeking to direct more resources away from their brothers and towards each other (Seger
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and Stubblefield 2002).
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It is difficult to see how such a struggle might play itself out in scale insects,
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which are hardly social insects. The only motile stage in a female's life is the first
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instar (“crawler”), after which she settles in one spot permanently. The male is slightly
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more mobile, having a motile (usually winged) adult form. Nonetheless, (1) the low
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motility of females, and the fact that they live mostly on long-lived woody plants, means
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that maternal kin may interact over long timescales, as in social insects; (2) some scale
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insects appear to make relatively sophisticated social decisions about where to settle,
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settling nearer to (and thus possibly competing more closely with) non-kin than kin
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(Kasuya 2000); (3) although most scale insects use phloem sap, an almost inexhaustible
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resource, armored scales use parenchyma tissues (Rosen 1990), which may be locally
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exhausted, and therefore may compete against neighbors for food. Thus, it is conceivable
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that females may compete against brothers and sisters for resources, that they may make
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decisions that affect the intensity of that competition, and that such decisions may have
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different optima from the perspectives of maternal versus paternal genes. Possibly, the
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presence of a massive contingent of maternal genes (a double dose of the complete
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maternal genome) in a nutritionally significant tissue like the bacteriome might somehow
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affect such decisions in ways favorable to maternal interests. Proximal mechanisms might
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include effects on signals or perceptions related to relatedness, gender, site quality,
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or satiety.
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Similar manipulation of intersibling interaction might be going on in the case of the
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parasitoid wasps that have polar body-derived membranes around their eggs. Sometimes
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these wasps lay a single unfertilized (male) egg and a single fertilized (female) egg
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into the same host. Both eggs divide to form embryos, which divide into a clone of many
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embryos. Some of the embryos become sterile “precocious” larvae that can apparently
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attack other larvae trying to use the same host—including, potentially, their own
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siblings (Ode and Hunter 2002). Here is a situation in which the polar body genes (in the
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membranes surrounding the proliferating embryos) might have very different selective
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optima for levels of between-sibling aggressiveness—and even for rates of
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development—than the genes in the embryos they surround, and (because they apparently
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mediate the nutrition of the embryos) they might be able to influence how the embryos
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develop.
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Gender crypsis.
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The endosymbiotic bacteria that dwell in the scale insects' bacteriomes are maternally
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inherited. Thus, from the perspective of the bacteria, male insects are deadends. Many
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maternally inherited bacteria have evolved to manipulate the hosts' genetic system for
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their own advantage. Some bacterial lineages induce parthenogenesis or feminize males.
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Bacteria may even evolve to suicidally kill male embryos that they find themselves in, if
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the death of the male frees up resources that his sisters can use (Majerus 2003). In
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order to do this, bacteria must respond to some cue that indicates the gender of the
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individual they are in. Potentially, a host could evolve resistance to such manipulation
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by maternally inherited bacteria by depriving those bacteria of cues indicating gender.
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In armored scales, the bacteriome has exactly the same genome (two complete copies of the
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mother's diploid genome and one complete copy of the father's genome) in all full
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siblings, whether they are male or female, and the same is usually true in mealybugs.
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This might explain why the bacteriome is the only tissue in which the father's genome
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remains present and active in both males and females.
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Prospects
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Scale insects and their bacteriomes challenge our notion of what an individual is. Is a
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scale insect's bacteriome a kind of sibling? Is it half sibling, half self? Is it a sterile
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slave, under control? Is it an extension of the mother, exerting control? In all other
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organisms, chimeras are temporary and unstable. How have scale insects suppressed the
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conflicts that normally tear chimeras apart? To approach such questions, we'll have to
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revive the empirical study of scale insect bacteriomes, combining approaches from recent
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studies of aphid bacteriomes (Braendle et al. 2003) and of human pregnancy (Haig 2002). We
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can better understand the nature of genetic conflicts in scale insects by studies of the
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genetic structure of scale insect populations, together with studies of sex ratio variation
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and the proximate mechanisms of sex determination. For simplicity, I have described only
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the most common of the huge variety of very different scale insect genetic systems and
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modes of bacteriome development (Tremblay 1977, 1990; Nur 1980). This diversity (greater
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than for the comparable cases of mammalian placentas and flowering-plant endosperms) means
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there is a huge scope for comparative ecological and genetic studies that could help
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elucidate general principles. The study of truly strange creatures can tell us what kinds
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of things are possible. That's why we will be so interested in any life found on another
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planet and why, in the meantime, we should take a close look at scale insects.
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