A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae

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A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae. / Conlon, Benjamin H.; Aurori, Adriana; Giurgiu, Alexandru Ioan; Kefuss, John; Dezmirean, Daniel S.; Moritz, Robin F. A.; Routtu, Jarkko.

I: Molecular Ecology, Bind 28, Nr. 12, 2019, s. 2958-2966.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Conlon, BH, Aurori, A, Giurgiu, AI, Kefuss, J, Dezmirean, DS, Moritz, RFA & Routtu, J 2019, 'A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae', Molecular Ecology, bind 28, nr. 12, s. 2958-2966. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15080

APA

Conlon, B. H., Aurori, A., Giurgiu, A. I., Kefuss, J., Dezmirean, D. S., Moritz, R. F. A., & Routtu, J. (2019). A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae. Molecular Ecology, 28(12), 2958-2966. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15080

Vancouver

Conlon BH, Aurori A, Giurgiu AI, Kefuss J, Dezmirean DS, Moritz RFA o.a. A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae. Molecular Ecology. 2019;28(12):2958-2966. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15080

Author

Conlon, Benjamin H. ; Aurori, Adriana ; Giurgiu, Alexandru Ioan ; Kefuss, John ; Dezmirean, Daniel S. ; Moritz, Robin F. A. ; Routtu, Jarkko. / A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae. I: Molecular Ecology. 2019 ; Bind 28, Nr. 12. s. 2958-2966.

Bibtex

@article{25363a4f260d4e2bbf1d4c1d20a6a4c5,
title = "A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae",
abstract = "Social insect colonies possess a range of defences which protect them against highly virulent parasites and colony collapse. The host–parasite interaction between honey bees (Apis mellifera) and the mite Varroa destructor is unusual, as honey bee colonies are relatively poorly defended against this parasite. The interaction has existed since the mid-20th Century, when Varroa switched host to parasitize A. mellifera. The combination of a virulent parasite and relatively na{\"i}ve host means that, without acaricides, honey bee colonies typically die within 3 years of Varroa infestation. A consequence of acaricide use has been a reduced selective pressure for the evolution of Varroa resistance in honey bee colonies. However, in the past 20 years, several natural-selection-based breeding programmes have resulted in the evolution of Varroa-resistant populations. In these populations, the inhibition of Varroa's reproduction is a common trait. Using a high-density genome-wide association analysis in a Varroa-resistant honey bee population, we identify an ecdysone-induced gene significantly linked to resistance. Ecdysone both initiates metamorphosis in insects and reproduction in Varroa. Previously, using a less dense genetic map and a quantitative trait loci analysis, we have identified Ecdysone-related genes at resistance loci in an independently evolved resistant population. Varroa cannot biosynthesize ecdysone but can acquire it from its diet. Using qPCR, we are able to link the expression of ecdysone-linked resistance genes to Varroa's meals and reproduction. If Varroa co-opts pupal compounds to initiate and time its own reproduction, mutations in the host's ecdysone pathway may represent a key selection tool for honey bee resistance and breeding.",
keywords = "co-evolution, ecdysone, host, parasite, reproduction, social insect",
author = "Conlon, {Benjamin H.} and Adriana Aurori and Giurgiu, {Alexandru Ioan} and John Kefuss and Dezmirean, {Daniel S.} and Moritz, {Robin F. A.} and Jarkko Routtu",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1111/mec.15080",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "2958--2966",
journal = "Molecular Ecology",
issn = "0962-1083",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A gene for resistance to the Varroa mite (Acari) in honey bee (Apis mellifera) pupae

AU - Conlon, Benjamin H.

AU - Aurori, Adriana

AU - Giurgiu, Alexandru Ioan

AU - Kefuss, John

AU - Dezmirean, Daniel S.

AU - Moritz, Robin F. A.

AU - Routtu, Jarkko

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Social insect colonies possess a range of defences which protect them against highly virulent parasites and colony collapse. The host–parasite interaction between honey bees (Apis mellifera) and the mite Varroa destructor is unusual, as honey bee colonies are relatively poorly defended against this parasite. The interaction has existed since the mid-20th Century, when Varroa switched host to parasitize A. mellifera. The combination of a virulent parasite and relatively naïve host means that, without acaricides, honey bee colonies typically die within 3 years of Varroa infestation. A consequence of acaricide use has been a reduced selective pressure for the evolution of Varroa resistance in honey bee colonies. However, in the past 20 years, several natural-selection-based breeding programmes have resulted in the evolution of Varroa-resistant populations. In these populations, the inhibition of Varroa's reproduction is a common trait. Using a high-density genome-wide association analysis in a Varroa-resistant honey bee population, we identify an ecdysone-induced gene significantly linked to resistance. Ecdysone both initiates metamorphosis in insects and reproduction in Varroa. Previously, using a less dense genetic map and a quantitative trait loci analysis, we have identified Ecdysone-related genes at resistance loci in an independently evolved resistant population. Varroa cannot biosynthesize ecdysone but can acquire it from its diet. Using qPCR, we are able to link the expression of ecdysone-linked resistance genes to Varroa's meals and reproduction. If Varroa co-opts pupal compounds to initiate and time its own reproduction, mutations in the host's ecdysone pathway may represent a key selection tool for honey bee resistance and breeding.

AB - Social insect colonies possess a range of defences which protect them against highly virulent parasites and colony collapse. The host–parasite interaction between honey bees (Apis mellifera) and the mite Varroa destructor is unusual, as honey bee colonies are relatively poorly defended against this parasite. The interaction has existed since the mid-20th Century, when Varroa switched host to parasitize A. mellifera. The combination of a virulent parasite and relatively naïve host means that, without acaricides, honey bee colonies typically die within 3 years of Varroa infestation. A consequence of acaricide use has been a reduced selective pressure for the evolution of Varroa resistance in honey bee colonies. However, in the past 20 years, several natural-selection-based breeding programmes have resulted in the evolution of Varroa-resistant populations. In these populations, the inhibition of Varroa's reproduction is a common trait. Using a high-density genome-wide association analysis in a Varroa-resistant honey bee population, we identify an ecdysone-induced gene significantly linked to resistance. Ecdysone both initiates metamorphosis in insects and reproduction in Varroa. Previously, using a less dense genetic map and a quantitative trait loci analysis, we have identified Ecdysone-related genes at resistance loci in an independently evolved resistant population. Varroa cannot biosynthesize ecdysone but can acquire it from its diet. Using qPCR, we are able to link the expression of ecdysone-linked resistance genes to Varroa's meals and reproduction. If Varroa co-opts pupal compounds to initiate and time its own reproduction, mutations in the host's ecdysone pathway may represent a key selection tool for honey bee resistance and breeding.

KW - co-evolution

KW - ecdysone

KW - host

KW - parasite

KW - reproduction

KW - social insect

U2 - 10.1111/mec.15080

DO - 10.1111/mec.15080

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30916410

AN - SCOPUS:85065443004

VL - 28

SP - 2958

EP - 2966

JO - Molecular Ecology

JF - Molecular Ecology

SN - 0962-1083

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 224022476