Team:UAlberta/Description

Combating the honey bee fungal freeloader, N. ceranae


What is Nosema ceranae?

Nosema ceranae, a fungus which parasitizes bees, has recently been detected in the major commercial honey bee species, Apis mellifera (European honeybee). N. ceranae invades epithelial cells in the bee midgut, resulting in the debilitating nosemosis disease. Like all microsporidian fungi, N. ceranae lack mitochondria making them dependent on its honey bee host for its energy source. Thus, Nosema infections results in energetic stress and has been implicated in reduced longevity, immune function, and performance of commercial honey bees, causing decreased hive productivity. Due to the integral role that bees have in industries like agriculture, and in the environment, the adverse effects of N. ceranae to honey bees, inspires much anxiety among the apiculture community.

Fumagilin: Treatment to bees, or not to be?

Our team was alerted to the threat of N. ceranae to honey bees by our discussions with local beekeepers and researchers, who expressed a desire for effective treatments against Nosema infections. Current methods of treating N. ceranae infections rely heavily on an antifungal agent called Fumagilin-B. However, Fumagilin-B is mutagenic, toxic to mammals, and has been shown to increase N. ceranae spore count at low doses. Moreover, the only North American supplier of Fumagilin-B has gone out of business and the remaining supply of Fumagilin-B is beginning to run low. Our discussions with the beekeeping community in Alberta, Canada revealed tremendous concern about the lack of an alternative safeguard against N. ceranae.

The effect of the honey industry to the Canadian economy also drives much of the concern regarding Nosema. Between honey production and the contribution of their pollination to agriculture, honey bees contributed roughly two billion dollars into Canada's economy in 2013. The economic impact of the bee industry in Canada is far reaching and a lack of fumagillin alternatives posses a severe risk to industry and individual livelihoods. These developments regarding the supply of Fumagilin-B and the effects of nosemosis on hive productivity, motivates Team UAlberta to develop alternative treatment against Nosema.

Porphyrins

Recent research has found that porphyrins, a class of organic compounds, are capable of inactivating N. ceranae spores. Porphyrin antifungal action is attributed to its disruption of spore cell walls (Figure 1). When bees’ diets were supplemented with chemically synthesized porphyrin species, spore count in the bees’ midgut significantly decreased while no adverse effects on the bees were observed. Particularly, a porphyrin derivative, PP(Asp)2 was successful in reducing the spore load in treated bees. Therefore, using porphyrin-type molecules, like PP(Asp)2, may be a feasible method of treating N. ceranae infections.

Plan Bee

Luckily, PP(Asp)2 is structurally similar to protoporphyrin IX, a porphyrin-type molecule produced endogenously in E. coli. Rather than feeding bees chemically synthesized PP(Asp)2, we aim to genetically engineer a strain of E. coli capable of living in the bee midgut to biosynthesize protoporphyrin IX. We will build off of the work of a previous iGEM teams (BeeColi; NYMU-Taipei , 2013) that developed an alginate coat to allow E. coli to travel through the harsh environment of the bee stomach to colonize the bee midgut. Once in the midgut, our E. coli will secrete excess porphyrin IX using an endogenous efflux pump (TolC). Given that ingested porphyrin IX has been shown to damage N. ceranae, we hypothesize that porphyrin IX secreted directly into the midgut will also damage N. ceranae, allowing us to BEE a part of the Nosema solution.