Login / Signup

Engineered gut symbiont inhibits microsporidian parasite and improves honey bee survival.

Qiang HuangPatrick J LariviereJ Elijah PowellNancy A Moran
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Honey bees ( Apis mellifera ) are critical agricultural pollinators as well as model organisms for research on development, behavior, memory, and learning. The parasite Nosema ceranae , a common cause of honey bee colony collapse, has developed resistance to small-molecule therapeutics. An alternative long-term strategy to combat Nosema infection is therefore urgently needed, with synthetic biology offering a potential solution. Honey bees harbor specialized bacterial gut symbionts that are transmitted within hives. Previously, these have been engineered to inhibit ectoparasitic mites by expressing double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) targeting essential mite genes, via activation of the mite RNA interference (RNAi) pathway. In this study, we engineered a honey bee gut symbiont to express dsRNA targeting essential genes of N. ceranae via the parasite's own RNAi machinery. The engineered symbiont sharply reduced Nosema proliferation and improved bee survival following the parasite challenge. This protection was observed in both newly emerged and older forager bees. Furthermore, engineered symbionts were transmitted among cohoused bees, suggesting that introducing engineered symbionts to hives could result in colony-level protection.
Keyphrases