4.8 Article

Flagellum Removal by a Nectar Metabolite Inhibits Infectivity of a Bumblebee Parasite

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 20, Pages 3494-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.08.037

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Peter Sowerby Foundation
  2. Ann Sowerby Fellowship

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Plant phytochemicals can act as natural medicines for animals against parasites [1-3]. Some nectar metabolites, for example, reduce parasite infections in bees [4-7]. Declining plant diversity through anthropogenic landscape change [8-11] could reduce the availability of medicinal nectar plants for pollinators, exacerbating their decline [12]. Existing studies are, however, limited by (1) a lack of mechanistic insights into how phytochemicals affect pollinator diseases and (2) the restriction to few, commercially available chemicals, thereby potentially neglecting plants with the biggest antiparasitic effects. To rapidly identify plants with the greatest potential as natural bee medicines, we developed a bioactivity-directed fractionation assay for nectar metabolites. We evaluated 17 important nectar plants against the bumblebee pathogen Crithidia bombi (Trypanosomatidae) [13-17]. The most bioactive species was heather (Calluna vulgaris), the second most productive UK nectar plant [10]. We identified 4-(3oxobut-1-enylidene)-3,5,5-trimethylcyclohex-2-en1-one (callunene) from heather nectar as a potent inhibitor of C. bombi. Wild bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) foraging on heather ingest callunene at concentrations causing complete C. bombi inhibition. Feeding on callunene was prophylactic against infections. We show that C. bombi establishes infections by flagellar anchoring to the ileum epithelium. Short-term callunene exposure induced flagellum loss in C. bombi choanomastigotes, resulting in a loss of infectivity. We conclude that plant secondary metabolites can disrupt parasite flagellum attachment, revealing a mechanism behind their prophylactic effects. The decline of heathlands [18-21] reduces the availability of natural bee medicine and could exacerbate the contribution of diseases to pollinator declines.

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