Deformed wing virus: using reverse genetics to tackle unanswered questions about the most important viral pathogen of honey bees

FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2021 Aug 17;45(4):fuaa070. doi: 10.1093/femsre/fuaa070.

Abstract

Deformed wing virus (DWV) is the most important viral pathogen of honey bees. It usually causes asymptomatic infections but, when vectored by the ectoparasitic mite Varroa destructor, it is responsible for the majority of overwintering colony losses globally. Although DWV was discovered four decades ago, research has been hampered by the absence of an in vitro cell culture system or the ability to culture pure stocks of the virus. The recent developments of reverse genetic systems for DWV go some way to addressing these limitations. They will allow the investigation of specific questions about strain variation, host tropism and pathogenesis to be answered, and are already being exploited to study tissue tropism and replication in Varroa and non-Apis pollinators. Three areas neatly illustrate the advances possible with reverse genetic approaches: (i) strain variation and recombination, in which reverse genetics has highlighted similarities rather than differences between virus strains; (ii) analysis of replication kinetics in both honey bees and Varroa, in studies that likely explain the near clonality of virus populations often reported; and (iii) pathogen spillover to non-Apis pollinators, using genetically tagged viruses to accurately monitor replication and infection.

Keywords: Deformed wing virus; Varroa destructor; honey bee; pathogen spillover; reverse genetics; virus bottleneck.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bees
  • RNA Viruses* / genetics
  • Reverse Genetics
  • Varroidae*
  • Viral Tropism

Supplementary concepts

  • Deformed wing virus