Characterization of the Kenyan honey bee (Apis mellifera) gut microbiota : a first look at tropical and Sub-Saharan African bee associated microbiomes

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Authors

Tola, Yosef Hamba
Waweru, Jacqueline Wahura
Hurst, Gregory D.D.
Slippers, Bernard
Paredes, Juan C.

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Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

Gut microbiota plays important roles in many physiological processes of the host including digestion, protection, detoxification, and development of immune responses. The honey bee (Apis mellifera) has emerged as model for gut-microbiota host interaction studies due to its gut microbiota being highly conserved and having a simple composition. A key gap in this model is understanding how the microbiome di ers regionally, including sampling from the tropics and in particular from Africa. The African region is important from the perspective of the native diversity of the bees, and di erences in landscape and bee management. Here, we characterized the honey bee gut microbiota in sub-Saharan Africa using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. We confirm the presence of the core gut microbiota members and highlight di erent compositions of these communities across regions. We found that bees from the coastal regions harbor a higher relative abundance and diversity on core members. Additionally, we showed that Gilliamella, Snodgrassella, and Frischella dominate in all locations, and that altitude and humidity a ect Gilliamella abundance. In contrast, we found that Lactobacillus was less common compared temperate regions of the world. This study is a first comprehensive characterization of the gut microbiota of honey bees from sub-Saharan Africa and underscores the need to study microbiome diversity in other indigenous bee species and regions.

Description

Supplemental material 1: Figure S1: Rarefaction curve (OTUs per reads/sample). Figure S2: Amplicon sequence variant (ASV) relative abundance of the main bacteria core members. Table S1: 16S rRNA sequencing data analysis (Excel file). Table S2: Most abundant environmental bacterial abundance and prevalence. Table S3: PERMANOVA analysis showed no bacterial community variation among locations. Table S4: Pairwise comparisons of bacterial relative abundance showed significant variation of Gilliamella among locations.

Keywords

Gilliamella, Frischella, Gut microbiota, Microbiome, Symbiont, Honeybee (Apis mellifera)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Tola, Y.H., Waweru, J.W., Hurst, G.D.D. et al. 2020, 'Characterization of the Kenyan honey bee (Apis mellifera) gut microbiota : a first look at tropical and Sub-Saharan African bee associated microbiomes', Microorganismsm vol. 8, art. 1721, pp. 1-14.