Early-Life Sublethal Thiacloprid Exposure to Honey Bee Larvae: Enduring Effects on Adult Bee Cognitive Abilities.
Xiasang ChenAirui LiLinghong YinLi KePing-Li DaiYong-Jun LiuPublished in: Toxics (2023)
Honey bees have significant ecological and economic value as important pollinators, but they are continuously exposed to various environmental stressors, including insecticides, which can impair their health and cause colony decline. (1) Background: Cognitive abilities are vital for the functional maintenance of honey bees; however, it remains unknown if chronic, low-dose exposure to thiacloprid during the larval stage impairs the cognitive abilities of emerged adult honey bees. (2) Methods: To explore this question, honey bee larvae were fed 0, 0.5, and 1.0 mg/L thiacloprid during their developmental phase. Then, the cognitive (i.e., olfactory learning and memory) abilities of adult honey bees were quantified to assess the delayed impacts of early-stage thiacloprid exposure on adult honey bee cognition. Neural apoptosis and transcriptomic level were also evaluated to explore the neurological mechanisms underlying these effects. (3) Results: Our results revealed that chronic larval exposure to sublethal thiacloprid impaired the learning and memory abilities of adult honey bees by inducing neuronal apoptosis and transcriptomic alterations. (4) Conclusions: We highlighted a previously unknown impairment caused by thiacloprid in honey bees.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- low dose
- early stage
- aedes aegypti
- early life
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- public health
- cell death
- mental health
- drosophila melanogaster
- high dose
- human health
- mild cognitive impairment
- lymph node
- brain injury
- young adults
- rna seq
- signaling pathway
- social media
- life cycle
- pi k akt