| Literature DB >> 31614974 |
Amélie Cabirol1, Albrecht Haase2,3.
Abstract
Acetylcholine is the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the honeybee brain and controls a wide range of behaviours that ensure the survival of the individuals and of the entire colony. Neonicotinoid pesticides target this neurotransmission pathway and can thereby affect the behaviours under its control, even at doses far below the toxicity limit. These sublethal effects of neonicotinoids on honeybee behaviours were suggested to be partly responsible for the decline in honeybee populations. However, the neural mechanisms by which neonicotinoids influence single behaviours are still unclear. This is mainly due to the heterogeneity of the exposure pathways, doses and durations between studies. Here, we provide a review of the state of the science in this field and highlight knowledge gaps that need to be closed. We describe the agonistic effects of neonicotinoids on neurons expressing the different nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and the resulting brain structural and functional changes, which are likely responsible for the behavioural alterations reported in bees exposed to neonicotinoids.Entities:
Keywords: Apis mellifera; acetylcholine; neonicotinoids; neurobiology; plasticity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614974 PMCID: PMC6835655 DOI: 10.3390/insects10100344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Schematic drawings of acetylcholinesterase (AchE) labelling in the neuropiles and some prominent groups of somata in the bee’s brain in a frontal view. The optic lobes lamina (la), medulla (me), and lobula (lo) display layered AChE staining. Weak AChE staining was found in the synaptic plexus of the ocelli (oc). The lobula is connected to the optic tubercle (ot). AChE-positive sensory fibres (arrow) of the antennal nerve project into the dorsal lobe (dl) and the suboesophageal ganglion (sog) below the oesophagus (oe). The median antennoglomerular tract (magt) connects the glomeruli of the antennal lobe (al) with the lip area (lip) of the median (mcal) and lateral calyx (Ical) of the mushroom bodies (MB). The collar (col) is a neuropilar compartment of the calyx receiving visual input. AChE-positive fibres leave the β-lobe (β) of the mushroom body. The central complex shows AChE activity in the pons (p), central body (cb) and a group of somata (s) ventrally to the central body. C-layer (c), α-lobe (α), antennal nerve (an). Scale = 100 µm (reproduced from [31] with permission by John Wiley and Sons).
Neuronal plasticity associated with chronic oral exposure to neonicotinoids in adult honeybees (* not European honeybees). Field-realistic doses based on [50] are highlighted in grey. nAchR: nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.
| Reference | Neonicotinoid | Treatment Duration | Minimal Dose | Effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| [ | Acetamiprid | 24 h, 48 h, 72 h | 80,000 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα1 after 72 h |
| Clothianidin | 0.3 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα1 after 72 h | |||
| Imidacloprid | 3 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα1 after 72 h | |||
| 3 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα2 after 48 h, but not after 72 h | ||||
| Thiametoxam | 1 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα1 after 48 h | |||
| 10 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα1 after 72 h | ||||
| 1 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRα2 after 48 h, but not after 72 h | ||||
| [ | Thiametoxam | 10 days | 10 ppb | 225 upregulated genes, 384 downregulated genes | |
| Increased expression of nAchRα9 and nAchRβ2 | |||||
| [ | Acetamiprid | 0.5 h, 1 h, 2 h, 3 h | 10,000 ppb | Increased expression of nAchRβ1 and nAchRβ2 at 0.5 h | |
| Imidacloprid | 1 h, 2 h, 3 h, 4 h | 10,000 ppb | Decreased expression of nAchRβ1 and nAchRβ2 at 1–2 h | ||
|
| [ | Imidacloprid | Larval stage (effects | 10 ppb | Decreased synaptic bouton density in the MB lateral calyces |
|
| 20 days after eclosion) | 100 ppb | Decreased synaptic bouton density in the MB median calyces | ||
| [ | Imidacloprid | 1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 days | 800 ppb | Increased cell death after 1 day in the optic lobes | |
| 8100 ppb | Increased cell death after 1 day in the mushroom bodies | ||||
| [ | Imidacloprid | 1, 4, 8 days | 14.6 ppb | Cellular alterations (mitochondria, chromatin, phagosomes) |
Figure 2Odour representations in the AL: Glomerular response maps are displayed in principal components (PCs). The trajectories represent 25 odorant stimulus repetitions (marked by numbers along the trajectories) in control (a) and treated (b) bees. Imidacloprid was administered on average between trials 4.6 and 6.6 to the treated group (b), while, in the same time window, the control group (a) was administered Ringer’s solution; (n = 5 bees per group; ACP: acetophenone, shown in blue, BZA: benzaldehyde, in cyan, 1-HEX: 1-hexanol, in yellow, and 1-OCT: 1-octanol, in red). PCs and axes are identical for (a) and (b), allowing the comparison of odour distinguishability (reproduced from [61] CC BY 4.0).
Figure 3Mean volume of the mushroom bodies in the brains of 1-day-old (triangles), 4-day-old (squares) or 8-day-old (circles) stingless bee workers (Melipona quadrifasciata anthidioides) reared on imidacloprid-contaminated diets during the larval period. The vertical bars represent standard errors (reproduced from [66] CC BY).