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Honey bees as models for gut microbiota research

Lab Animal, ISSN: 1548-4475, Vol: 47, Issue: 11, Page: 317-325
2018
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Most Recent Blog

Rounding up the Honey Bees (2)

by Christoph   This is the 2nd part of a longread, 1,550 words – 12 min reading – still "left over" after the first part went on­line last week. I borrowed the title from TWiM episode #178 for the irresistible pun, just adding a drop of ho­ney.   From microbiota to species, to strains, to genes Glyphosate is a competitive inhibitor of the shikimate pathway that microbes and plants use for the synt

Review Description

The gut microbiota of the honey bee (Apis mellifera) offers several advantages as an experimental system for addressing how gut communities affect their hosts and for exploring the processes that determine gut community composition and dynamics. A small number of bacterial species dominate the honey bee gut community. These species are restricted to bee guts and can be grown axenically and genetically manipulated. Large numbers of microbiota-free hosts can be economically reared and then inoculated with single isolates or defined communities to examine colonization patterns and effects on host phenotypes. Honey bees have been studied extensively, due to their importance as agricultural pollinators and as models for sociality. Because of this history of bee research, the physiology, development, and behavior of honey bees is relatively well understood, and established behavioral and phenotypic assays are available. To date, studies on the honey bee gut microbiota show that it affects host nutrition, weight gain, endocrine signaling, immune function, and pathogen resistance, while perturbation of the microbiota can lead to reduced host fitness. As in humans, the microbiota is concentrated in the distal part of the gut, where it contributes to digestion and fermentation of plant cell wall components. Much like the human gut microbiota, many bee gut bacteria are specific to the bee gut and can be directly transmitted between individuals through social interaction. Although simpler than the human gut microbiota, the bee gut community presents opportunities to understand the processes that govern the assembly of specialized gut communities as well as the routes through which gut communities impact host biology.

Bibliographic Details

Zheng, Hao; Steele, Margaret I.; Leonard, Sean P.; Motta, Erick V. S.; Moran, Nancy A.

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Veterinary

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