Logo image
Glyphosate contact alters the expression of genes in the head of africanized Apis mellifera bees
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Glyphosate contact alters the expression of genes in the head of africanized Apis mellifera bees

Jaine da Luz Scheffer, Yan Souza Lima, Juliana Sartori Lunardi, Samir Moura Kadri, Marcus Vinícius Niz Alvarez, Ricardo de Oliveira Orsi and Isabella Lippi
OBSERVATÓRIO DE LA ECONOMÍA LATINOAMERICANA, Vol.22(11), pp.1-25
11/11/2024
pdf
Glyphosate contact alters the expression of genes in the head of africanized Apis mellifera bees897.90 kBDownloadView
Published (Version of record)CC BY-NC V4.0 Open Access
url
Glyphosate contact alters the expression of genes in the head of africanized Apis mellifera beesView
Published (Version of record)CC BY-NC V4.0 Open

Related links

Metrics

38 File views/ downloads
35 Record Views

Abstract

The increase in the world population results in a greater demand for food, intensifying the dependence on pesticides use. Glyphosate, a pesticide widely used in crops, can contaminate resources collected by bees. In this context, this study aimed to analyze the transcriptome of the head of Africanized Apis mellifera bees during the foraging phase to determine whether contact with the herbicide glyphosate, in lethal and sublethal doses, causes changes in the gene expression profile. For this, 180 marked bees were collected from their hives, aged 21 days, and distributed into three treatment groups: 1) bees in contact with the lethal dose of glyphosate (255.73 µg/bee); 2) bees in contact with the sublethal dose of glyphosate (2.5573 µg/bee); 3) control group with distilled water. Transcriptome analysis was performed on 12 bees from each treatment after one and four hours of exposure. The results show that one hour of contact with glyphosate resulted in 57 genes presenting differential expression in relation to the control (11 lethal and 53 sublethal), interfering in the signaling, communication and metabolism processes, while four hours of exposure, 38 genes (32 lethal and 11 sublethal) related, mainly, to the stimulation of the immune response. In summary, glyphosate affects the gene expression of honey bees during the foraging phase, at both doses, resulting in negative effects on behavior, metabolism and immune system, which compromises the health, activity and development of the colonies, also compromising the process of pollination.

Details

Logo image