Simple Summary The microsporidium Vairimorpha (Nosema) ceranae is an emergent and highly virulent pathogen of the European honey bee. The study of this parasite and the development of new therapies… Click to show full abstract
Simple Summary The microsporidium Vairimorpha (Nosema) ceranae is an emergent and highly virulent pathogen of the European honey bee. The study of this parasite and the development of new therapies is difficult due to the seasonality of the disease in nature, with a short period of availability of infected individuals for investigation. In this paper, we present and characterize an easy and convenient method for V. ceranae cultivation using artificially infected worker bees under laboratory conditions. Abstract Nosemosis type C is a dangerous and widespread disease of the adult European honey bee Apis mellifera and is caused by the spore-forming intracellular parasite Vairimorpha (Nosema) ceranae. The search for new ways of therapy for this disease is complicated due to the seasonal availability of V. ceranae-infected insects as well as the lack of a developed system for the pathogen’s cultivation. By carrying out trials which used different infectious dosages of the parasite, spore storage protocols, host age, and incubation temperatures, we present a simple, safe, and efficient method of V. ceranae propagation in artificially infected worker bees in the laboratory. The method is based on feeding the groups of adult worker bees with microsporidian spores and insect maintenance in plastic bottles at 33 °C. The source of the spores originated from the cadavers of infected insects from the previous round of cultivation, in which the infective spores persist for up to six months. An analysis of five independent cultivation rounds involving more than 2500 bees showed that the proposed protocol exploiting the dosage of one million spores per bee yielded over 60 million V. ceranae spores per bee, and most of the spore samples can be isolated from living insects.
               
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