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The fate of radiolabelled C28 and C29 phytosterols in the honey bee
Authors:JA Svoboda  EW Herbert  MJ Thompson  H Shimanuki
Institution:1. Insect Physiology Laboratory, Agricultural Research, SEA, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705, U.S.A.;2. Bioenvironmental Bee Laboratory, Agricultural Research, SEA, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705, U.S.A.
Abstract:The fate of radiolabelled campesterol, sitosterol and 24-methylenecholesterol fed in chemically-defined diets to honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) workers was determined. At various intervals, sterols of prepupae, newly emerged adults and queens were analyzed qualitatively, quantitatively and radiochemically and it was determined that there was not sufficient radioactivity associated with cholesterol and/or desmosterol in any of the samples to verify that any of the three C28 and C29 sterols was dealkylated and converted to cholesterol. Similarly, there was no evidence for the conversion of campesterol or sitosterol to 24-methylenecholesterol. It was concluded that the major portion of the sterols incorporated into the tissues of the brood larvae originated from the worker bees used to establish the colony. There is good evidence supporting the premise that the workers can make available sterols from their endogenous pools to the nutrient in the hive and that they can replenish these sterols with those from the artificial diet. The queen is also able to replenish sterols utilized in egg production from those obtained by the workers from the artificial diet, and at the end of nine weeks queens contained more than four times as much sterol, on a ‘μg sterol per g fresh weight’ basis, than was found in fertile queens at the beginning of the test period.
Keywords:Honey bee  prepupae  workers  queens  radiolabelled sterols  sterol metabolism  defined diet
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