A honey bee-associated virus remains infectious and quantifiable in postmortem hosts

Alexandria N Payne, Vincent Prayugo, Adam G Dolezal
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Abstract

Corpse-mediated transmission is a potentially viable route through which naive hosts can become infected, but its likelihood for honey bee-associated viruses is largely unknown. While these viruses can be easily detected in deceased bees, it remains unclear if they stay infectious within postmortem hosts or if enough viral RNA degradation—and subsequently virus inactivation—occurs post-host death to render these viruses inviable. This knowledge gap has important implications for how researchers perform honey bee virus studies and for our general understanding of honey bee virus transmission. To better understand the resiliency of honey bee-associated viruses within deceased hosts, we first tested the hypothesis that postmortem specimens, stored in colony-normal temperature and humidity conditions, can be reliably used to quantify virus abundance. To determine this, we experimentally-infected adult honey bees with Israeli acute paralysis virus (IAPV) and then measured the virus levels of individuals sampled live or at different postmortem timepoints (4–, 12–, 24–, and 48–hours post-death) using RT-qPCR and a standard curve absolute quantification method. We found no significant differences based on when bees were sampled, indicating that postmortem honey bees are statistically comparable to using live-sampled bees and can be reliably used to quantify absolute IAPV abundance. We then performed a follow-up experiment that determined whether or not the IAPV detected in postmortem bees remained infectious over time. We found that IAPV extracted from postmortem bees remained highly infectious for at least 48–hours post-death, indicating that any viral RNA degradation that may have occurred during the postmortem interval did not adversely affect the overall infectivity of IAPV. The results from this study suggest that IAPV is more resilient to degradation than previously assumed, support the use of postmortem bees for downstream IAPV analyses, and indicate that postmortem hosts can act as sources of IAPV infection for susceptible individuals.
一种与蜜蜂有关的病毒在死后宿主体内仍具有传染性和可定量性
以尸体为媒介的传播是一种潜在的可行途径,天真的宿主可以通过这种途径感染病毒,但蜜蜂相关病毒是否可能通过这种途径感染病毒在很大程度上还是未知数。虽然这些病毒很容易在死亡的蜜蜂体内被检测到,但目前仍不清楚它们是否会在死后宿主体内保持传染性,或者宿主死亡后是否会发生足够的病毒 RNA 降解,进而导致病毒失活,从而使这些病毒失去生存能力。这一知识空白对研究人员如何进行蜜蜂病毒研究以及我们对蜜蜂病毒传播的总体认识都有重要影响。为了更好地了解蜜蜂相关病毒在死亡宿主体内的恢复能力,我们首先测试了这样一个假设,即在宿主正常温度和湿度条件下保存的死后标本可以可靠地用于量化病毒数量。为了确定这一点,我们用以色列急性麻痹病毒(IAPV)对成年蜜蜂进行了实验性感染,然后使用 RT-qPCR 和标准曲线绝对定量法测定了活体或死后不同时间点(死后 4、12、24 和 48 小时)采样个体的病毒含量。我们发现,不同时间取样的蜜蜂没有明显差异,这表明死后取样的蜜蜂与活体取样的蜜蜂在统计学上具有可比性,可用于可靠地量化 IAPV 的绝对丰度。我们随后进行了一项后续实验,以确定在死后蜜蜂中检测到的 IAPV 是否会随着时间的推移而继续具有传染性。我们发现,从死后蜜蜂体内提取的 IAPV 在死亡后至少 48 小时内仍具有高度传染性,这表明死后间隔期间可能发生的病毒 RNA 降解并未对 IAPV 的整体传染性产生不利影响。这项研究的结果表明,IAPV的降解能力比以前假定的更强,支持使用死后蜜蜂进行下游IAPV分析,并表明死后宿主可作为易感个体的IAPV感染源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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