Regional variation in composition and antimicrobial activity
of US propolis against Paenibacillus larvae and Ascosphaera apis
J Invertebr Pathol. 2014 Oct 24;124C:44-50
Propolis is a substance derived from antimicrobial plant
resins that honey bees use in the construction of their nests. Propolis use in
the hive is an important component of honey bee social immunity and confers a
number of positive physiological benefits to bees. The benefits that bees
derive from resins are mostly due to their antimicrobial properties, but it is
unknown how the diversity of antimicrobial activities among resins might impact
bee health. In our previous work, we found that resins from different North
American Populus spp. differed in their ability to inhibit in vitro growth of
the bee bacterial pathogen Paenibacillus larvae. The goal of our current work
was to characterize the antimicrobial activity of propolis from 12 climatically
diverse regions across the US against the bee pathogens P. larvae and
Ascosphaeraapis and compare the metabolite profiles among those samples using
LC-MS-based metabolomic methods. Samples differed greatly in their ability to
inhibit both bacterial and fungal growth in vitro, but propolis from Nevada,
Texas, and California displayed high activity against both pathogens.
Interestingly, propolis from Georgia, New York, Louisiana, and Minnesota were
active against A. apis, but not very active against P. larvae. Metabolomic
analysis of regional propolis samples revealed that each sample was
compositionally distinct, and LC-FTMS profiles from each sample contained a
unique number of shared and exclusive peaks. Propolis from Aspen, CO, Tuscon,
AZ, and Raleigh, NC, contained relatively large numbers of exclusive peaks,
which may indicate that these samples originated from relatively unique
botanical sources. This is the first study to characterize how the diversity of
bee preferred resinous plants in the US may affect bee health, and could guide
future studies on the therapeutic potential of propolis for bees.
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