http://loom.corante.com/archives/2006/02/02/the_wisdom_of_parasites.php

February 02, 2006

The Wisdom of Parasites

Posted by Carl Zimmer

I collect tales of parasites the way some people collect Star Trek
plates. And having filled an entire book with them, I thought I had
pretty much collected the whole set. But until now I had somehow
missed the gruesome glory that is a wasp named Ampulex compressa.

As an adult, Ampulex compressa seems like your normal wasp, buzzing
about and mating. But things get weird when it's time for a female to
lay an egg. She finds a cockroach to make her egg's host, and proceeds
to deliver two precise stings. The first she delivers to the roach's
mid-section, causing its front legs buckle. The brief paralysis caused
by the first sting gives the wasp the luxury of time to deliver a more
precise sting to the head.

The wasp slips her stinger through the roach's exoskeleton and
directly into its brain. She apparently use ssensors along the sides
of the stinger to guide it through the brain, a bit like a surgeon
snaking his way to an appendix with a laparoscope. She continues to
probe the roach's brain until she reaches one particular spot that
appears to control the escape reflex. She injects a second venom that
influences these neurons in such a way that the escape reflex
disappears.

>From the outside, the effect is surreal. The wasp does not paralyze
the cockroach. In fact, the roach is able to lift up its front legs
again and walk. But now it cannot move of its own accord. The wasp
takes hold of one of the roach's antennae and leads it--in the words
of Israeli scientists who study Ampulex--like a dog on a leash.

The zombie roach crawls where its master leads, which turns out to be
the wasp's burrow. The roach creeps obediently into the burrow and
sits there quietly, while the wasp plugs up the burrow with pebbles.
Now the wasp turns to the roach once more and lays an egg on its
underside. The roach does not resist. The egg hatches, and the larva
chews a hole in the side of the roach. In it goes.

The larva grows inside the roach, devouring the organs of its host,
for about eight days. It is then ready to weave itself a cocoon--which
it makes within the roach as well. After four more weeks, the wasp
grows to an adult. It breaks out of its cocoon, and out of the roach
as well. Seeing a full-grown wasp crawl out of a roach suddenly makes
those Alien movies look pretty derivative.

Ampulex%20emerging.jpg

I find this wasp fascinating for a lot of reasons. For one thing, it
represents an evolutionary transition. Over and over again,
free-living organisms have become parasites, adapting to hosts with
exquisite precision. If you consider a full-blown parasite, it can be
hard to conceive of how it could have evolved from anything else.
Ampulex offers some clues, because it exists in between the
free-living and parasitic worlds.

Amuplex is not technically a parasite, but something known as an
exoparasitoid. In other words, a free-living adult lays an egg outside
a host, and then the larva crawls into the host. One could easily
imagine the ancestors of Ampulex as wasps that laid their eggs near
dead insects--as some species do today. These corpse-feeding ancestors
then evolved into wasps that attacked living hosts. Likewise, it's not
hard to envision an Ampulex-like wasp evolving into full-blown
parasitoids that inject their eggs directly into their hosts, as many
species do today.

And then there's the sting. Ampulex does not want to kill cockroaches.
It doesn't even want to paralyze them the way spiders and snakes do,
since it is too small to drag a big paralyzed roach into its burrow.
So instead it just delicately retools the roach's neural network to
take away its motivation. Its venom does more than make roaches
zombies. It also alters their metabolism, so that their intake of
oxygen drops by a third. The Israeli researchers found that they could
also drop oxygen consumption in cockroaches by injecting paralyzing
drugs or by removing the neurons that the wasps disable with their
sting. But they can manage only a crude imitation; the manipulated
cockroaches quickly dehydrated and were dead within six days. The wasp
venom somehow puts the roaches into suspended animation while keeping
them in good health, even as a wasp larva is devouring it from the
inside

Scientists don't yet understand how Ampulex manages either of these
feats. Part of the reason for their ignorance is the fact that
scientists have much left to learn about nervous systems and
metabolism. But millions of years of natural selection has allowed
Ampulex to reverse engineer its host. We would do well to follow its
lead, and gain the wisdom of parasites.

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