Litcius/Paper detail

Honey Bee Larval and Adult Microbiome Life Stages Are Effectively Decoupled with Vertical Transmission Overcoming Early Life Perturbations

Vienna Kowallik, Alexander S. Mikheyev

2021mBio52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This work investigated host-microbiome interactions during a crucial developmental stage-the transition from larvae to adults, which is a challenge to both, the insect host and its microbiome. Using the honey bee as a tractable model system, we showed that microbiome transfer after emergence overrides any variation in the larvae, indicating that larval and adult microbiome stages are effectively decoupled. Together with the reliable vertical transfer in the eusocial system, this decoupling ensures that the adults are colonized with a consistent and derived microbiome after eclosion. Taken all together, our data provide additional support that the evolution of sociality, at least in the honey bee system tested here, is linked with host-microbiome relationships.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeBiologyLarvaZoologyEcologyGut microbiomeCoevolutionEusocialityTransmission (telecommunications)OrganismNicheHost (biology)Evolutionary biologyEcological nicheHuman microbiomeHoney beeInsectLife history theoryMetagenomicsInsect and Pesticide ResearchInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior