LC-MS/MS Quantification Reveals Ample Gut Uptake and Metabolization of Dietary Phytochemicals in Honey Bees (Apis mellifera)
Journal article, 2021

The honey bee pollen/nectar diet is rich in bioactive phytochemicals and recent studies have demonstrated the potential of phytochemicals to influence honey bee disease resistance. To unravel the role of dietary phytochemicals in honey bee health it is essential to understand phytochemical uptake, bioavailability, and metabolism but presently limited knowledge exists. With this study we aim to build a knowledge foundation. For 5 days, we continuously fed honey bees on eight individual phytochemicals and measured the concentrations in whole and dissected bees by HPLC-MS/MS. Ample phytochemical metabolization was observed, and only 6-30% of the consumed quantities were recovered. Clear differences in metabolization rates were evident, with atropine, aucubin, and triptolide displaying significantly slower metabolism. Phytochemical gut uptake was also demonstrated, and oral bioavailability was 4-31%, with the highest percentages observed for amygdalin, triptolide, and aucubin. We conclude that differences in the chemical properties and structure impact phytochemical uptake and metabolism.

HPLC-MS/MS

diet

methyllycaconitine

honey bee

aucubin

triptolide

bioavailability

amygdalin

gut

quantification

metabolization

senkirkine

gelsemine

senecionine

phytochemical

uptake

atropine

Apis mellifera

Author

Nanna Hjort Vidkjaer

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Food and Nutrition Science

Aarhus University

Inge S. Fomsgaard

Aarhus University

Per Kryger

Aarhus University

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

0021-8561 (ISSN) 1520-5118 (eISSN)

Vol. 69 2 627-637

Subject Categories

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Nutrition and Dietetics

DOI

10.1021/acs.jafc.0c03584

PubMed

33416324

More information

Latest update

2/15/2021