Pathogenic
plant virus jumps to honeybees
Toxic
viral cocktails appear to have a strong link with honey bee Colony
Collapse Disorder (CCD), a mysterious malady that abruptly wiped out
entire hives across the United States and was first reported in 2006.
Israel Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV), Acute Bee Paralysis Virus
(ABPV), Chronic Paralysis Virus (CPV), Kashmir Bee Virus (KBV),
Deformed Wing Bee Virus (DWV), Black Queen Cell Virus (BQCV) and
Sacbrood Virus (SBV) are other known causes of honeybee viral
disease.
24
January, 2014
A
viral pathogen that typically infects plants has been found in
honeybees and could help explain their decline. Researchers working
in the U.S. and Beijing, China report their findings in mBio, the
online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
The
routine screening of bees for frequent and rare viruses "resulted
in the serendipitous detection of Tobacco Ringspot Virus, or TRSV,
and prompted an investigation into whether this plant-infecting virus
could also cause systemic infection in the bees," says Yan Ping
Chen from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland, an author on the
study.
"The
results of our study provide the first evidence that honeybees
exposed to virus-contaminated pollen can also be infected and that
the infection becomes widespread in their bodies," says lead
author Ji Lian Li, at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science in
Beijing.
"We
already know that honeybees, Apis melllifera, can transmit TRSV when
they move from flower to flower, likely spreading the virus from one
plant to another," Chen adds.
Notably,
about 5% of known plant viruses are pollen-transmitted and thus
potential sources of host-jumping viruses. RNA viruses tend to be
particularly dangerous because they lack the 3'-5' proofreading
function which edits out errors in replicated genomes. As a result,
viruses such as TRSV generate a flood of variant copies with
differing infective properties.
One
consequence of such high replication rates are populations of RNA
viruses thought to exist as "quasispecies," clouds of
genetically related variants that appear to work together to
determine the pathology of their hosts. These sources of genetic
diversity, coupled with large population sizes, further facilitate
the adaption of RNA viruses to new selective conditions such as those
imposed by novel hosts. "Thus, RNA viruses are a likely source
of emerging and reemerging infectious diseases," explain these
researchers.
Toxic
viral cocktails appear to have a strong link with honey bee Colony
Collapse Disorder (CCD), a mysterious malady that abruptly wiped out
entire hives across the United States and was first reported in 2006.
Israel Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV), Acute Bee Paralysis Virus
(ABPV), Chronic Paralysis Virus (CPV), Kashmir Bee Virus (KBV),
Deformed Wing Bee Virus (DWV), Black Queen Cell Virus (BQCV) and
Sacbrood Virus (SBV) are other known causes of honeybee viral
disease.
When
these researchers investigated bee colonies classified as "strong"
or "weak," TRSV and other viruses were more common in the
weak colonies than they were in the strong ones. Bee populations with
high levels of multiple viral infections began failing in late fall
and perished before February, these researchers report. In contrast,
those in colonies with fewer viral assaults survived the entire cold
winter months.
TRSV
was also detected inside the bodies of Varroa mites, a "vampire"
parasite that transmits viruses between bees while feeding on their
blood. However, unlike honeybees, the mite-associated TRSV was
restricted to their gastric cecum indicating that the mites likely
facilitate the horizontal spread of TRSV within the hive without
becoming diseased themselves. The fact that infected queens lay
infected eggs convinced these scientists that TRSV could also be
transmitted vertically from the queen mother to her offspring.
"The
increasing prevalence of TRSV in conjunction with other bee viruses
is associated with a gradual decline of host populations and supports
the view that viral infections have a significant negative impact on
colony survival," these researchers conclude. Thus, they call
for increased surveillance of potential host-jumping events as an
integrated part of insect pollinator management programs.
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