Intricate transmission routes and interactions between picorna-like viruses (Kashmir bee virus and sacbrood virus) with the honeybee host and the parasitic varroa mite
- 1 August 2005
- journal article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Journal of General Virology
- Vol. 86 (8) , 2281-2289
- https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.80824-0
Abstract
Viral diseases of honeybees are a major problem in apiculture, causing serious economic losses worldwide, especially in combination with varroa mites. To increase understanding of the relationship among viruses, mites and colony decline, the tripartite relationships among bees, viruses [Kashmir bee virus (KBV) and sacbrood virus (SBV)] and varroa mites have been investigated systematically. To develop an antibody-based test for KBV, two structural recombinant proteins were purified for polyclonal-antibody production. By using ELISA and RT-PCR, the presence of KBV and SBV was studied comparatively in different developmental stages and castes of bees. The results demonstrated that KBV may persist as a viral genome with extremely low levels of viral-capsid proteins and that KBV and SBV can co-infect honeybees. This study indicated the presence of KBV and SBV RNAs in both queens and eggs by RT-PCR, suggesting a route of transovarial transmission. Horizontal transmission is also very likely among adult bees and from adult workers to larvae through contaminated food resources, because both viruses have been detected in all developmental stages and food sources (brood food, honey, pollen and royal jelly). Furthermore, it was demonstrated that mites were another possible route of horizontal transmission, as both viruses were detected in mites and their saliva. This study, for the first time, detected co-occurrence of viruses in varroa, further underlining the importance of the mites in vectoring different bee viruses. Therefore, these results indicated that multiple infection routes exist for honeybee viral diseases.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phylogenetic Analysis of Acute Bee Paralysis Virus StrainsApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2002
- Aspects of the persistence of foot-and-mouth disease virus in animals—the carrier problemMicrobes and Infection, 2002
- Interactions among Varroa jacobsoni mites, acute paralysis virus, and Paenibacillus larvae larvae and their influence on mortality of larval honeybees in vitroApidologie, 2000
- The incidence and world distribution of honey bee virusesBee World, 1996
- Characterisation and serological relationships of strains of Kashmir bee virusAnnals of Applied Biology, 1995
- The prevalence of pathogens in honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies infested with the parasitic mite Varroa jacobsoniAnnals of Applied Biology, 1988
- The Detection of Acute Paralysis Virus inVarroa Jacobsoniby the Use of a Simple Indirect ElisaJournal of Apicultural Research, 1986
- Two More Small RNA Viruses from Honey Bees and Further Observations on Sacbrood and Acute Bee-Paralysis VirusesJournal of General Virology, 1977
- The multiplication and spread of sacbrood virus of beesAnnals of Applied Biology, 1969
- Sacbrood virus of the larval honey bee (Apis mellifera linnaeus)Virology, 1964