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Comment
. 2024 Oct 16;15(10):e0210724.
doi: 10.1128/mbio.02107-24. Epub 2024 Sep 26.

Is it me or is it you? Physiological effects of the honey bee microbiota may instead be due to host maturation

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Comment

Is it me or is it you? Physiological effects of the honey bee microbiota may instead be due to host maturation

Waldan K Kwong et al. mBio. .

Abstract

Microbiota-mediated impacts on host physiology and behavior have been widely reported in honey bees (Apis mellifera). However, most of these studies are conducted in artificial lab settings and fail to take into account, or make incorrect assumptions about, the complex physical and social structures inherent to natural hive conditions. A new study by Liberti et al. (J. Liberti, E. T. Frank, T. Kay, L. Kesner, et al., mBio 15:e01034-24, 2024, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01034-24) identifies one such overlooked aspect-the behavioral maturation from nurses to foragers-that can be a serious confounding factor in bee microbiota experiments. Using cuticular hydrocarbon profiling to discern between the two maturation states, they find that multiple physiological and behavioral differences between age-matched lab bees could potentially be explained by their maturation state instead of the intended treatment conditions, such as microbial inoculation. This study serves as a stark wake-up call on the necessity of careful replication and cross-disciplinary knowledge transfer (e.g., between animal specialists and microbiologists) in order to truly understand complex host-microbe systems.

Keywords: behavior; entomology; gut microbiota; nonhuman microbiota.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Comment on

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