Home \ Research \ Scientific publications \


A Comparison of Deformed Wing Virus in Deformed and Asymptomatic Honey Bees

Investigation published in Insects

March 7th, 2017

Deformed wing virus (DWV) in association with Varroa destructor is currently attributed to being responsible for colony collapse in the western honey bee (Apis mellifera). The appearance of deformed individuals within an infested colony has long been associated with colony losses. However, it is unknown why only a fraction of DWV positive bees develop deformed wings. This study concerns two small studies comparing deformed and non-deformed bees. In Brazil, asymptomatic bees (no wing deformity) that had been parasitised by Varroa as pupae had higher DWV loads than non-parasitised bees. However, we found no greater bilateral asymmetry in wing morphology due to DWV titres or parasitisation. As expected, using RT-qPCR, deformed bees were found to contain the highest viral loads. In a separate study, next generation sequencing (NGS) was applied to compare the entire DWV genomes from paired symptomatic and asymptomatic bees from three colonies on two different Hawaiian islands. This revealed no consistent differences between DWV genomes from deformed or asymptomatic bees, with the greatest variation seen between locations, not phenotypes. All samples, except one, were dominated by DWV type A. This small-scale study suggests that there is no unique genetic variant associated with wing deformity; but that many DWV variants have the potential to cause deformity




Brettell LE., Mordecai GJ., Schroeder DC., Jones IM., de Silva JR., Vicente-Rubiano M. and Martin SJ.




See this article
A Comparison of Deformed Wing Virus in Deformed and Asymptomatic Honey Bees

See it on NLM PubMed
A Comparison of Deformed Wing Virus in Deformed and Asymptomatic Honey Bees



Participants:

School of Environment and Life Science. University of Salford.

Viral Ecology. Marine Biological Association.

School of Food Biosciences. University of Reading.

Department of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sciences. The University of British Columbia.

Centro de Ciências Agrárias. Ambientais e Biológicas. Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia.

Universidad ComplutenseServicio de Inmunología Viral y Medicina Preventiva (SUAT). Centro de Vigilancia Sanitaria Veterinaria (VISAVET). Universidad Complutense (UCM).

Universidad ComplutenseDepartamento de Sanidad Animal. Facultad de Veterinaria. Universidad Complutense (UCM).







Insects
FACTOR YEAR Q
1.848 2017

NLMID: 101574235

PMID: 28272333

ISSN: 2075-4450



TITLE: A Comparison of Deformed Wing Virus in Deformed and Asymptomatic Honey Bees


JOURNAL: Insects


NUMERACIÓN: 8(1):1-12


AÑO: 2017


PUBLISHER: MDPI AG


AUTHORS: Brettell LE., Mordecai GJ., Schroeder DC., Jones IM., de Silva JR., Vicente-Rubiano M. and Martin SJ.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/insects8010028


CITE THIS PUBLICATION:

Brettell LE., Mordecai GJ., Schroeder DC., Jones IM., de Silva JR., Vicente-Rubiano M. and Martin SJ. A Comparison of Deformed Wing Virus in Deformed and Asymptomatic Honey Bees. Insects. 8(1):1-12. 2017. (A). ISSN: 2075-4450. DOI: 10.3390/insects8010028


UNITS: