4.6 Article

Immune system stimulation by the native gut microbiota of honey bees

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.170003

Keywords

antimicrobial peptides; apidaecin; innate immunity; symbiosis

Funding

  1. Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Postgraduate Scholarship
  2. Yale University
  3. National Institutes of Health award [1R01-GM108477-01]

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Gut microbial communities can greatly affect host health by modulating the host's immune system. For many important insects, however, the relationship between the gut microbiota and immune function remains poorly understood. Here, we test whether the gut microbial symbionts of the honey bee can induce expression of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), a crucial component of insect innate immunity. We find that bees up-regulate gene expression of the AMPs apidaecin and hymenoptaecin in gut tissue when the microbiota is present. Using targeted proteomics, we detected apidaecin in both the gut lumen and the haemolymph; higher apidaecin concentrations were found in bees harbouring the normal gut microbiota than in bees lacking gut microbiota. In in vitro assays, cultured strains of the microbiota showed variable susceptibility to honey bee AMPs, although many seem to possess elevated resistance compared to Escherichia coli. In some trials, colonization by normal gut symbionts resulted in improved survivorship following injection with E. coli. Our results show that the native, non-pathogenic gut flora induces immune responses in the bee host. Such responses might be a host mechanism to regulate the microbiota, and could potentially benefit host health by priming the immune system against future pathogenic infections.

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