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A Lineage-Specific Peptide Suppresses Juvenile Hormone to Drive Reproductive and Longevity Reprogramming in Ants

Preprint Created on 25 May 2026 bioRxiv

In ants and other eusocial insects, reproductive division of labor is tightly regulated by juvenile hormone (JH), which suppresses reproduction in most individuals to maintain the worker caste. However, how social cues trigger systemic JH suppression to permit reproductive activation remains unclear. In the ant Harpegnathos saltator, workers respond to queen loss by engaging in sustained ritualistic dueling and transitioning into reproductive, long-lived pseudoqueens (gamergates). This provides a powerful model for investigating the molecular basis of socially induced plasticity. We examined the hemolymph proteome of transitioning ants and identified HCRG1, a lineage-restricted peptide upregulated during dueling, as a circulating factor that physically interacts with Hex70c, a broadly conserved JH-binding Hexamerin. HCRG1 promotes ovarian development by antagonizing JH signaling. Expression of ant HCRG1 in the heterologous solitary model Drosophila also extends lifespan. These findings identify an evolutionarily derived circulating factor that links social sensory perception to systemic JH suppression, enabling coordinated reproductive and longevity transitions in a social insect.

Ding, L., Mlejnek, J., Zheng, H., Lee, C.-H., Chen, Y.-C., Reinberg, D., Desplan, C.

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