Chronic exposure to glyphosate induces transcriptional changes in honey bee larva: A toxicogenomic study

The honey bee Apis mellifera is the most abundant managed pollinator in diverse crops worldwide. Consequently, it is exposed to a plethora of environmental stressors, among which are the agrochemicals. In agroecosystems, the herbicide glyphosate (GLY) is one of the most applied. In laboratory assess...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2020-06, Vol.261, p.114148, Article 114148
Hauptverfasser: Vázquez, Diego E., Latorre-Estivalis, José M., Ons, Sheila, Farina, Walter M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The honey bee Apis mellifera is the most abundant managed pollinator in diverse crops worldwide. Consequently, it is exposed to a plethora of environmental stressors, among which are the agrochemicals. In agroecosystems, the herbicide glyphosate (GLY) is one of the most applied. In laboratory assessments, GLY affects the honey bee larval development by delaying its moulting, among other negative effects. However, it is still unknown how GLY affects larval physiology when there are no observable signs of toxicity. We carried out a longitudinal experimental design using the in vitro rearing procedure. Larvae were fed with food containing or not a sub-lethal dose of GLY in chronic exposure (120 h). Individuals without observable signs of toxicity were sampled and their gene expression profile was analyzed with a transcriptomic approach to compare between treatments. Even though 29% of larvae were asymptomatic in the exposed group, they showed transcriptional changes in several genes after the GLY chronic intake. A total of 19 transcripts were found to be differentially expressed in the RNA-Seq experiment, mainly linked with defensive response and intermediary metabolism processes. Furthermore, the enriched functional categories in the transcriptome of the exposed asymptomatic larvae were linked with enzymes with catalytic and redox activity. Our results suggest an enhanced catabolism and oxidative metabolism in honey bee larvae as a consequence of the sub-lethal exposure to GLY, even in the absence of observable symptoms. [Display omitted] •Honey bee larvae were chronically fed in vitro with food containing glyphosate.•At the end of the cohort study, larvae without signs of toxicity were sampled.•Exposed asymptomatic larvae showed differentially expressed genes in RNA-Seq.•Enriched functional categories suggested high catalytic and oxidative metabolism.
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114148