Exploring Honeybee Abdominal Anatomy through Micro-CT and Novel Multi-Staining Approaches
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Carreira de Paula, Jessica; Doello, Kevin; Mesas Hernández, Cristina; Kapravelou, Garyfalia; Cornet Gómez, Alberto; Orantes, Francisco José; Martínez Martínez, Rosario; Linares Ordóñez, Fátima; Prados Salazar, José Carlos; Porres Foulquie, Jesús María; Osuna Carrillo De Albornoz, Antonio; Pablos Torró, Luis Miguel deEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Bee Abdomen Midgut Stain Micro-CT
Date
2022-06-18Referencia bibliográfica
De Paula, J.C... [et al.]. Exploring Honeybee Abdominal Anatomy through Micro-CT and Novel Multi-Staining Approaches. Insects 2022, 13, 556. [https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13060556]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government PGC2018-098929-A-I0Abstract
Continuous improvements in morphological and histochemical analyses of Apis mellifera
could improve our understanding of the anatomy and physiology of these insects at both the cellular
and tissue level. In this work, two different approaches have been performed to add new data on the
abdomen of worker bees: (i) Micro-computed tomography (Micro-CT), which allows the identification
of small-scale structures (micrometers) with adequate/optimal resolution and avoids sample damage
and, (ii) histochemical multi-staining with Periodic Acid-Schiff-Alcian blue, Lactophenol-Saphranin
O and pentachrome staining to precisely characterize the histological structures of the midgut
and hindgut. Micro-CT allowed high-resolution imaging of anatomical structures of the honeybee
abdomen with particular emphasis on the proventriculus and pyloric valves, as well as the connection
of the sting apparatus with the terminal abdominal ganglia. Furthermore, the histochemical analyses
have allowed for the first-time description of ventricular telocytes in honeybees, a cell type located
underneath the midgut epithelium characterized by thin and long cytoplasmic projections called
telopodes. Overall, the analysis of these images could help the detailed anatomical description of
the cryptic structures of honeybees and also the characterization of changes due to abiotic or biotic
stress conditions.