Recently, it has become apparent that multiple factors are responsible for honey bee decline, including climate change, pests and pathogens, pesticides, and loss of foraging habitat. Of the large number of pathogens known to infect honey bees, very few are bacteria. Because adult workers abandon hives when diseased, many of their pathogens may go unnoticed. Here we characterized the virulence of Serratia marcescens strains isolated from honey bee guts and hemolymph. Our results indicate that S. marcescens, an opportunistic pathogen of many plants and animals, including humans, is a virulent opportunistic pathogen of honey bees, which could contribute to bee decline. Aside from the implications for honey bee health, the discovery of pathogenic S. marcescens strains in honey bees presents an opportunity to better understand how opportunistic pathogens infect and invade hosts.
Acyclovir (9-[2-hydroxyethoxymethyl]guanine or ACV) is a nucleoside analogue with considerable potential for the treatment of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections in man. Two virus-coded enzymes are important in the mechanism of action of this drug: thymidine kinase (TK) which initiates its activation by converting it to the monophosphate and DNA polymerase whose action is inhibited by ACV triphosphate. Changes in either gene may confer resistance, but all reported mutations in the TK gene have resulted in failure of the resistant virus to induce appreciable levels of the enzyme. Such TK- mutants arise readily in tissue culture systems where the enzyme is non-essential for virus replication, but in animals they show considerably reduced pathogenicity and neurovirulence. We now describe the isolation of a resistant mutant which induces a TK of altered substrate specificity and we show that this virus retains pathogenicity for mice with only a slight attenuation of neurovirulence.
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