Zhao Chonghui, Peng Yehua, Raza Muhammad Fahad, Wang Wenbo, Zhang Yi, Chen Yanping, Han Richou, Guo Jun, Huang Shaokang, Li Wenfeng
Guangdong Key Laboratory of Animal Conservation and Resource Utilization, Guangdong Public Laboratory of Wild Animal Conservation and Utilization, Institute of Zoology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, 510260, China; Faculty of Life Science and Technology, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, Yunnan, 650500, China.
Guangdong Key Laboratory of Animal Conservation and Resource Utilization, Guangdong Public Laboratory of Wild Animal Conservation and Utilization, Institute of Zoology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, 510260, China; College of Bee Science and Biomedicine, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, 350002, China.
Environ Res. 2025 Jun 1;274:121306. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2025.121306. Epub 2025 Mar 5.
The widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides has severely impacted honey bees, driving population declines. Gut microbiota are increasingly recognized for their role in mitigating pesticide toxicity. This study evaluated the ability of Gilliamella sp. G0441, a core microbiome member of the Asian honey bee (Apis cerana), to confer resistance to the toxicity of a neonicotinoid nitenpyram. Newly emerged Asian honey bees were first colonized with gut microbiota in the source colony, then divided into four treatments: SS (fed sucrose solution throughout), SN (fed sucrose solution, then exposed to nitenpyram), GS (fed Gilliamella, then sucrose solution), and GN (fed Gilliamella, then exposed to nitenpyram), and their responses-mortality, food consumption, body weight, and sucrose sensitivity-were assessed. The protective effects of Gilliamella administration on the host were further validated using a microbiota-free bee model. Gilliamella supplementation significantly mitigated nitenpyram-induced appetite suppression, weight loss, impaired learning, and gut microbiota disruption. Mechanistic analyses revealed that nitenpyram disrupted brain metabolism via the intestinal MAPK pathway, reducing ascorbate and aldarate metabolism. Prophylactic Gilliamella treatment reversed these effects, restored metabolic balance, and modulated esterase E4 expression, enhancing pesticide resistance. This study underscores Gilliamella's vital role in honey bee resilience to neonicotinoids, offering insights into the microbiota-gut-brain axis (MGBA) as a pathway for enhancing pesticide tolerance and ecological health.
新烟碱类杀虫剂的广泛使用对蜜蜂造成了严重影响,导致其数量下降。肠道微生物群因其在减轻农药毒性方面的作用而日益受到认可。本研究评估了亚洲蜜蜂(中华蜜蜂)核心微生物群成员吉氏菌属G0441对新烟碱类杀虫剂烯啶虫胺毒性的抗性。新羽化的亚洲蜜蜂首先在源蜂群中定殖肠道微生物群,然后分为四个处理组:SS组(全程喂食蔗糖溶液)、SN组(喂食蔗糖溶液,然后暴露于烯啶虫胺)、GS组(喂食吉氏菌,然后喂食蔗糖溶液)和GN组(喂食吉氏菌,然后暴露于烯啶虫胺),并评估它们的反应——死亡率、食物消耗、体重和蔗糖敏感性。使用无菌蜜蜂模型进一步验证了施用吉氏菌对宿主的保护作用。补充吉氏菌显著减轻了烯啶虫胺引起的食欲抑制、体重减轻、学习障碍和肠道微生物群破坏。机制分析表明,烯啶虫胺通过肠道丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPK)途径破坏大脑代谢,减少抗坏血酸和醛糖代谢。预防性施用吉氏菌可逆转这些影响,恢复代谢平衡,并调节酯酶E4表达,增强对农药的抗性。本研究强调了吉氏菌在蜜蜂对新烟碱类杀虫剂的抗性中的重要作用,为微生物群-肠道-脑轴(MGBA)作为增强农药耐受性和生态健康的途径提供了见解。