THE TROUBLE WITH BEES


Microbiology Major Determined to Cure Honeybee Disease

The “Bee Movie” may have inspired Keera Paull’s devotion to honeybees.

Or maybe it was the cartoon likeness on the box of her favorite honey-flavored breakfast cereal that spurred her fondness for the insects that she watched, from a young age, buzzing between clover on North Idaho’s Rathdrum Prairie.

“I was never afraid of them, like most kids. I used to get bumble bees to crawl on my hands,” said Paull, a University of Idaho senior and science major.

Even though Paull, a graduate of Lake City High in Coeur d’Alene, can’t pinpoint when she fell in love with honeybees, the loyalty resulted in a honeybee tattoo and a promise to her high school class that she would pursue a career in helping bees survive.

Since enrolling at U of I, Paull has kept that promise. vAs part of her undergraduate research in Professor JT Van Leuven’s lab, Paull is isolating bacteriophages, viruses that infect bacteria. She hopes that by identifying and propagating the viruses she can use them to attack two species of bacteria that cause foulbrood disease in beehives.

American foulbrood is a fatal honeybee disease caused by bacteria that kill bee larvae. Beekeepers are often forced to burn infected colonies, and the wooden hives in which they live, to prevent the spread of the disease.

“Treatment options for foulbrood are minimal and destructive,” Paull said. “Antibiotic treatment is generally only used by commercial beekeepers in the U.S. and is banned in Europe.”

Use of antibiotics contributes to the spread of antibiotic resistance and requires testing before human consumption of treated bee products, she said.

Paull, a recent recipient of the Beverly Flowers Memorial Scholarship, spent last summer extracting and sequencing bacteriophages and bacterial DNA from honeybee samples collected in the Pacific Northwest. She performed whole genome sequencing on the phages to genetically characterize and distinguish the different versions.

“Keera’s research is important for developing the basic principles of viral ecology,” Van Leuven said.

Her lab work is helping researchers understand how microbes in a honeybee’s environment — including its gut — contribute to bee health.