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 Scientists have
found that honey bees suffering from Colony Collapse Disorder, a syndrome that
has been devastating these essential pollinators, have a compromised protein
synthesis system. Click the image for more information about
it. |
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Honey Bees with Colony Collapse Disorder Show
their Genes
By Kim
Kaplan August 24, 2009
The first hard evidence of what is happening physiologically inside
bees during Colony
Collapse Disorder (CCD) has been published in a new study by
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and
University of Illinois scientists in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. The study also looked at differences in activity levels of
critical genes in CCD and healthy bee colonies.
Using a tool called a genome-wide microarray, the scientists found a
large amount of abnormal ribosomal RNA (rRNA) fragments in the guts of honey
bees in CCD colonies. Ribosomes are the cellular factories in which proteins
are made, guided by rRNA, and a large amount of abnormal rRNA fragments means
the protein construction system is compromised. This indicates that honey bees
in colonies diagnosed with CCD had reduced ability to synthesize new proteins.
The gut is the primary entry point for pathogens and pesticides in
honey bees. Honey bees' stress response systems also can be measured in the
bee's gut. The honey bee has two separate response systems: one to
environmental stresses such as pesticides, and a different one reacting to
pathogens such as viruses.
This was the first time RNA levels have been measured in honey bees as
a way of tracking whether it is honey bees' pesticide response system or their
pathogen immune response system that is reacting in CCD, according to ARS
geneticist
Jay
Evans, who works in the
Bee
Research Laboratory at the ARS
Henry
A. Wallace Beltsville (Md.) Agricultural Research Center. Evans was part of
a team that included entomologists
May R.
Berenbaum, Reed M. Johnson
and
Gene
E. Robinson from the University of Illinois.
In CCD colonies, the genes involved in the pathogen/immune response
systems showed no single clear pattern of activity, although there was commonly
more activation of these genes and the bees had a higher overall level of
viruses and other pathogens than non-CCD colonies.
Almost all CCD colonies had a higher level of picorna-like viruses,
which attack the ribosome. Picorna-like viruses that attack honey bees include
deformed wing virus and Israeli acute paralysis virus. The varroa mite, a major
honey bee parasite, is known to transmit picorna-like viruses.
Bees in CCD colonies did not show significantly active pesticide
response genes.
The loss of ribosomal function would explain many of the phenomena
associated with CCD, according to Berenbaum. If the bees' ribosomes are
compromised, then they can't overcome exposure to pesticides, fungal infections
or bacteria or inadequate nutrition because the ribosome is central to the
survival of any organism.
The study did not establish a direct cause-and-effect link between the
abnormal rRNA and CCD. But colony surveillance by assays of rRNA and other
markers expressed by bees could provide the earliest indication of CCD found so
far, perhaps in time for beekeepers to take actions that might reduce losses,
Evans suggested.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of
Agriculture.