Department of Chemistry, Haverford College, Haverford, PA, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Mar 7;14(3):e0213249. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213249. eCollection 2019.
Honey bee (Apis mellifera) health has been severely impacted by multiple environmental stressors including parasitic infection, pesticide exposure, and poor nutrition. The decline in bee health is therefore a complex multifactorial problem which requires a holistic investigative approach. Within the exposome paradigm, the combined exposure to the environment, drugs, food, and individuals' internal biochemistry affects health in positive and negative ways. In the context of the exposome, honey bee hive infection with parasites such as Nosema ceranae is also a form of environmental exposure. In this study, we hypothesized that exposure to xenobiotic pesticides and other environmental chemicals increases susceptibility to N. ceranae infection upon incidental exposure to the parasite. We further queried whether these exposures could be linked to changes in conserved metabolic biological pathways. From 30 hives sampled across 10 sites, a total of 2,352 chemical features were found via gas chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry (GC-TOF) in extracts of honey bees collected from each hive. Of these, 20 pesticides were identified and annotated, and found to be significantly associated with N. ceranae infection. We further determined that infected hives were linked to a greater number of xenobiotic exposures, and the relative concentration of the exposures were not linked to the presence of a N. ceranae infection. In the exposome profiles of the bees, we also found chemicals inherent to known biological metabolic pathways of Apis mellifera and identified 9 dysregulated pathways. These findings have led us to posit that for hives exposed to similar chemicals, those that incur multiple, simultaneous xenobiotic stressors have a greater incidence of infection with N. ceranae. Mechanistically, our results suggests the overwhelming nature of these exposures negatively affects the biological functioning of the bee, and could explain how the decline in bee populations is associated with pesticide exposures.
蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)的健康受到多种环境胁迫的严重影响,包括寄生虫感染、农药暴露和营养不良。因此,蜜蜂健康的下降是一个复杂的多因素问题,需要采用整体调查方法。在暴露组学范式中,环境、药物、食物和个体内部生物化学的综合暴露以积极和消极的方式影响健康。在暴露组学的背景下,蜜蜂蜂巢感染寄生虫,如 Ceranae 微孢子虫,也是一种环境暴露形式。在这项研究中,我们假设偶然接触寄生虫时,暴露于外来农药和其他环境化学物质会增加对 Ceranae 微孢子虫感染的易感性。我们进一步探究这些暴露是否与保守代谢生物途径的变化有关。在从 10 个地点采集的 30 个蜂群中,通过气相色谱-飞行时间质谱法(GC-TOF)在每个蜂群采集的蜜蜂提取物中发现了总共 2352 种化学特征。其中,鉴定并注释了 20 种农药,发现它们与 Ceranae 微孢子虫感染显著相关。我们还进一步确定,感染的蜂群与更多的外来物暴露有关,而暴露的相对浓度与 Ceranae 微孢子虫感染的存在无关。在蜜蜂的暴露组学图谱中,我们还发现了固有 Apis mellifera 已知生物代谢途径的化学物质,并确定了 9 个失调的途径。这些发现使我们假设,对于暴露于类似化学物质的蜂群来说,那些同时遭受多种外来物压力的蜂群感染 Ceranae 微孢子虫的发病率更高。从机制上讲,我们的结果表明,这些暴露的压倒性性质会对蜜蜂的生物功能产生负面影响,并解释了为什么蜂群数量的下降与农药暴露有关。