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Dive into the research topics where Johan Billen is active.

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Featured researches published by Johan Billen.


Science | 2014

Conserved class of queen pheromones stops social insect workers from reproducing

Annette Van Oystaeyen; Ricardo Caliari Oliveira; Luke Holman; Jelle van Zweden; Carmen Romero; Cintia Akemi Oi; Patrizia d'Ettorre; Mohammadreza Khalesi; Johan Billen; Felix L. Wäckers; Jocelyn G. Millar; Tom Wenseleers

Long Live the Queen Eusociality is often considered to have arisen, at least in part, due to the inclusive fitness that workers gain through helping their queen sister to raise her offspring. Van Oystaeyen et al. (p. 287; see the Perspective by Chapuisat) characterized the sterility-inducing queen pheromone across three distantly related eusocial hymenopterans (a wasp, a bumblebee, and a desert ant) and synthesized data across 69 other species. Queen pheromones appear to be remarkably conserved, which suggests that reproductive manipulation has ancient roots. Social insect queens use an ancient, evolutionarily conserved class of pheromones to prevent worker reproduction. [Also see Perspective by Chapuisat] A major evolutionary transition to eusociality with reproductive division of labor between queens and workers has arisen independently at least 10 times in the ants, bees, and wasps. Pheromones produced by queens are thought to play a key role in regulating this complex social system, but their evolutionary history remains unknown. Here, we identify the first sterility-inducing queen pheromones in a wasp, bumblebee, and desert ant and synthesize existing data on compounds that characterize female fecundity in 64 species of social insects. Our results show that queen pheromones are strikingly conserved across at least three independent origins of eusociality, with wasps, ants, and some bees all appearing to use nonvolatile, saturated hydrocarbons to advertise fecundity and/or suppress worker reproduction. These results suggest that queen pheromones evolved from conserved signals of solitary ancestors.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 1998

Widespread occurrence of the micro-organism Wolbachia in ants

Tom Wenseleers; Fuminori Ito; S. Van Borm; R. Huybrechts; F. Volckaert; Johan Billen

For more than 20 years, sex allocation in hymenopteran societies has been a major topic in insect sociobiology. A recurring idea was that relatedness asymmetries arising from their haplodiploid sex determination system would lead to various parent–offspring conflicts over optimal reproduction. A possible weakness of existing theory is that only interests of nuclear genes are properly accounted for. Yet, a diversity of maternally transmitted elements manipulate the reproduction of their host in many solitary arthropod groups. The bacterium Wolbachia is a striking example of such a selfish cytoplasmic element, with effects ranging from reproductive incompatibility between host strains, induction of parthenogenesis and feminization of males. This paper reports on a first PCR–based Wolbachia screening in ants. Out of 50 Indo–Australian species, 50% screened positive for an A–group strain. One of these species also harboured a B–group strain in a double infection. Various factors that might explain the unusually high incidence of Wolbachia in ants are discussed. In general, Wolbachia may represent a widespread and previously unrecognized party active in the conflicts of interest within social insect colonies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Metformin promotes lifespan through mitohormesis via the peroxiredoxin PRDX-2

Wouter De Haes; Lotte Frooninckx; Roel Van Assche; Arne Smolders; Geert Depuydt; Johan Billen; Bart P. Braeckman; Liliane Schoofs; Liesbet Temmerman

Significance Recently it has been suggested that metformin, the most commonly used antidiabetic drug, might also possess general health-promoting properties. Elucidating metformin’s mode of action will vastly increase its application range and will contribute to healthy aging. We reveal a signaling cascade in which metformin is able to extend lifespan by increasing the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). This allowed us to further work at the crossroads of human disease and aging research, identifying a key molecule that is able to translate the ROS signal into a prolongevity cue: an antioxidant peroxiredoxin is also able to activate a lifespan-promoting signaling cascade, here described in detail. Continued research efforts in this field lead toward a targeted improvement of aging-related complications. The antiglycemic drug metformin, widely prescribed as first-line treatment of type II diabetes mellitus, has lifespan-extending properties. Precisely how this is achieved remains unclear. Via a quantitative proteomics approach using the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans, we gained molecular understanding of the physiological changes elicited by metformin exposure, including changes in branched-chain amino acid catabolism and cuticle maintenance. We show that metformin extends lifespan through the process of mitohormesis and propose a signaling cascade in which metformin-induced production of reactive oxygen species increases overall life expectancy. We further address an important issue in aging research, wherein so far, the key molecular link that translates the reactive oxygen species signal into a prolongevity cue remained elusive. We show that this beneficial signal of the mitohormetic pathway is propagated by the peroxiredoxin PRDX-2. Because of its evolutionary conservation, peroxiredoxin signaling might underlie a general principle of prolongevity signaling.


The American Naturalist | 2009

The Life of a Dead Ant: The Expression of an Adaptive Extended Phenotype

Sandra B. Andersen; Sylvia Gerritsma; Kalsum M. Yusah; David Mayntz; Nigel L. Hywel-Jones; Johan Billen; Jacobus J. Boomsma; David P. Hughes

Specialized parasites are expected to express complex adaptations to their hosts. Manipulation of host behavior is such an adaptation. We studied the fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, a locally specialized parasite of arboreal Camponotus leonardi ants. Ant‐infecting Ophiocordyceps are known to make hosts bite onto vegetation before killing them. We show that this represents a fine‐tuned fungal adaptation: an extended phenotype. Dead ants were found under leaves, attached by their mandibles, on the northern side of saplings ∼25 cm above the soil, where temperature and humidity conditions were optimal for fungal growth. Experimental relocation confirmed that parasite fitness was lower outside this manipulative zone. Host resources were rapidly colonized and further secured by extensive internal structuring. Nutritional composition analysis indicated that such structuring allows the parasite to produce a large fruiting body for spore production. Our findings suggest that the osmotrophic lifestyle of fungi may have facilitated novel exploitation strategies.


Proceedings of the royal society of london series b-biological sciences | 2002

Tetraponera ants have gut symbionts related to nitrogen-fixing root-nodule bacteria

Steven Van Borm; Alfred Buschinger; Jacobus J. Boomsma; Johan Billen

Some Tetraponera ants (Formicidae, Pseudomyrmecinae) subsist almost entirely on amino acid deficient honeydew secretions of pseudococcids and harbour a dense aggregation of bacterial symbionts in a unique pouch–shaped organ at the junction of the midgut and the intestine. The organ is surrounded by a network of intruding tracheae and Malpighian tubules, suggesting that these bacteria are involved in the oxidative recycling of nitrogen–rich metabolic waste. We have examined the ultrastructure of these bacteria and have amplified, cloned and sequenced ribosomal RNA–encoding genes, showing that the ant pouch contains a series of close relatives of Flavobacteria and Rhizobium, Methylobacterium, Burkholderia and Pseudomonas nitrogen–fixing root–nodule bacteria. We argue that pouch bacteria have been repeatedly ‘domesticated’ by the ants as nitrogen–recycling endosymbionts. This ant–associated community of mutualists is, to our knowledge, the first finding of symbionts related to root–nodule bacteria in animals.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2003

Caste fate conflict in swarm-founding social Hymenoptera: an inclusive fitness analysis

Tom Wenseleers; Francis L. W. Ratnieks; Johan Billen

A caste system in which females develop into morphologically distinct queens or workers has evolved independently in ants, wasps and bees. Although such reproductive division of labour may benefit the colony it is also a source of conflict because individual immature females can benefit from developing into a queen in order to gain greater direct reproduction. Here we present a formal inclusive fitness analysis of caste fate conflict appropriate for swarm‐founding social Hymenoptera. Three major conclusions are reached: (1) when caste is self‐determined, many females should selfishly choose to become queens and the resulting depletion of the workforce can substantially reduce colony productivity; (2) greater relatedness among colony members reduces this excess queen production; (3) if workers can prevent excess queen production at low cost by controlled feeding, a transition to nutritional caste determination should occur. These predictions generalize results derived earlier using an allele‐frequency model [Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. (2001) 50: 467] and are supported by observed levels of queen production in various taxa, especially stingless bees, where caste can be either individually or nutritionally controlled.


BMC Ecology | 2011

Behavioral mechanisms and morphological symptoms of zombie ants dying from fungal infection

David P. Hughes; Sandra B. Andersen; Nigel L. Hywel-Jones; Winanda Himaman; Johan Billen; Jacobus J. Boomsma

BackgroundParasites that manipulate host behavior can provide prominent examples of extended phenotypes: parasite genomes controlling host behavior. Here we focus on one of the most dramatic examples of behavioral manipulation, the death grip of ants infected by Ophiocordyceps fungi. We studied the interaction between O. unilateralis s.l. and its host ant Camponotus leonardi in a Thai rainforest, where infected ants descend from their canopy nests down to understory vegetation to bite into abaxial leaf veins before dying. Host mortality is concentrated in patches (graveyards) where ants die on sapling leaves ca. 25 cm above the soil surface where conditions for parasite development are optimal. Here we address whether the sequence of ant behaviors leading to the final death grip can also be interpreted as parasite adaptations and describe some of the morphological changes inside the heads of infected workers that mediate the expression of the death grip phenotype.ResultsWe found that infected ants behave as zombies and display predictable stereotypical behaviors of random rather than directional walking, and of repeated convulsions that make them fall down and thus precludes returning to the canopy. Transitions from erratic wandering to death grips on a leaf vein were abrupt and synchronized around solar noon. We show that the mandibles of ants penetrate deeply into vein tissue and that this is accompanied by extensive atrophy of the mandibular muscles. This lock-jaw means the ant will remain attached to the leaf after death. We further present histological data to show that a high density of single celled stages of the parasite within the head capsule of dying ants are likely to be responsible for this muscular atrophy.ConclusionsExtended phenotypes in ants induced by fungal infections are a complex example of behavioral manipulation requiring coordinated changes of host behavior and morphology. Future work should address the genetic basis of such extended phenotypes.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1996

Chemistry of metapleural gland secretions of three attine ants,Atta sexdens rubropilosa, Atta cephalotes, andAcromyrmex octospinosus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).

Ruth R. Do Nascimento; Eric Schoeters; E. David Morgan; Johan Billen; David J. Stradling

The chemical composition of the secretions of the metapleural glands of workers and soldiers of twoAtta species,Atta sexdens rubropilosa andA. cephalotes, and workers ofAcromyrmex octospinosus, has been studied. As indicated by infrared spectrometry and confirmed by the ninhydrin test, the secretions contain chiefly proteins. Of the volatile acidic portion, which is present as ionized salts, phenylacetic acid is the major component in workers and soldiers ofA. s. rubropilosa andA. cephalotes. BothAtta species also contain 3-hydroxydecanoic acid and its homolog as minor components together with indoleacetic acid. While there are qualitative similarities in the acidic composition in the secretions ofA. s. rubropilosa andA. cephalotes, they differ quantitatively. The secretion ofAcromyrmex octospinosus contains 3-hydroxydecanoic and indoleacetic acids, but lacks phenylacetic acid. The bactericidal and fungicidal actions of the three major substances have been confirmed.


Physiological Entomology | 1994

On the similarity of the Dufour gland secretion and the cuticular hydrocarbons of some bumblebees

Neil J. Oldham; Johan Billen; E. David Morgan

Abstract. There is a close correspondence in composition between the hydrocarbons of the Dufour gland and the cuticular hydrocarbons of workers of some bumblebee species. This correspondence is characteristic of the species, and independent of the place and time of collection.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2008

Wolbachia in leafcutter ants: a widespread symbiont that may induce male killing or incompatible matings

S. Van Borm; Tom Wenseleers; Johan Billen; Jacobus J. Boomsma

Wolbachia is a maternally inherited bacterium that manipulates host reproduction by inducing cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), parthenogenesis or male killing (MK). Here, we report on a screening of seven leafcutter ant species of the genera Atta and Acromyrmex. Using Wolbachia‐specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers we show that all species are infected, usually by double A + B strain infections. For Acromyrmex echinatior and A. octospinosus, a screening across all castes shows that gynes (prospective queens) have higher infection rates than workers and males. The low infection rate of workers suggests that workers lose their infection during development. This we interpret as adaptive, because a heritable symbiont does not benefit from being present in sterile workers. Both CI and MK could potentially account for the low infection rate of males. Formal theoretical models show greater support for the MK scenario in the free living species A. echinatior and A. octospinosus but indicate that Wolbachia in the social parasite A. insinuator may cause CI, supporting a scenario of sympatric speciation of the social parasite. We conclude that Wolbachia represents a previously unrecognized source of reproductive conflict in leafcutter ant colonies.

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Bruno Gobin

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Tom Wenseleers

Catholic University of Leuven

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Eric Schoeters

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Roger Huybrechts

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Kevin Heylen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Lut Arckens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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