| Literature DB >> 23991051 |
Svjetlana Vojvodic1, Sandra M Rehan, Kirk E Anderson.
Abstract
The first step in understanding gut microbial ecology is determining the presence and potential niche breadth of associated microbes. While the core gut bacteria of adult honey bees is becoming increasingly apparent, there is very little and inconsistent information concerning symbiotic bacterial communities in honey bee larvae. The larval gut is the target of highly pathogenic bacteria and fungi, highlighting the need to understand interactions between typical larval gut flora, nutrition and disease progression. Here we show that the larval gut is colonized by a handful of bacterial groups previously described from guts of adult honey bees or other pollinators. First and second larval instars contained almost exclusively Alpha 2.2, a core Acetobacteraceae, while later instars were dominated by one of two very different Lactobacillus spp., depending on the sampled site. Royal jelly inhibition assays revealed that of seven bacteria occurring in larvae, only one Neisseriaceae and one Lactobacillus sp. were inhibited. We found both core and environmentally vectored bacteria with putatively beneficial functions. Our results suggest that early inoculation by Acetobacteraceae may be important for microbial succession in larvae. This assay is a starting point for more sophisticated in vitro models of nutrition and disease resistance in honey bee larvae.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23991051 PMCID: PMC3749107 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0072106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Maximum-parsimony consensus tree containing 186 bacterial strains isolated from honey bee larvae and 31 reference strains taken from previous publications identifying adult bee gut bacteria (see File S1).
Bootstrap values over 50% are shown.
Figure 2Combined bacterial phylotypes isolated from both European and Africanized apiaries and five honey bee larval instars.
Figure 3Bacterial phylotypes isolated from different larval instars and two different locations: (A) Casa Grande apiary with managed European bees; (B) Page Ranch apiary with non-managed Africanized bees.
Figure 4An example of honey bee larval gut bacteria from each identified phylotype and observed growing next to filter paper disks covered in royal jelly: (A) Acetobacteraceae; (B) Neisseriaceae; (C) Lactobacillus sp. B; (D) Bifidobacterium; (E) Bacillus sp.; (F) Fructobacillus fructosus; (G) Lactobacillus kunkeei; (H) Lactobacillus sp. A. Both control bacteria were inhibited (I) Lactobacillus kunkeei isolated from a flower; (J) Staphylococcus sp. isolated from a bee-bread (pollen stored in honeycomb cells).
Some reduction in growth around royal jelly disc was recorded for Neisseriaceae as shown by the arrow.
Inhibition test of bacteria by pure royal jelly on agar plates.
| Bacteria | Mean zone of inhibition ± SE |
|
| |
|
| 17.5±1 |
|
| 6.9±0.4 |
|
| 0.6±0.2 |
|
| – |
| Acetobacteraceae (strains CS1, CS5, AP14) | – |
| Neisseriaceae (strains AB10, AS2, A17) | 2.9±1 |
|
| – |
|
| – |
|
| – |
|
| – |
|
| – |
|
| 1.5±0.7 |
Bacterial samples were isolated from honey bee larvae and the control bacteria were isolated from flowers and bee bread. Mean diameter of zones of inhibition (in millimetres ± S.E.).
− = No zone of inhibition observed.