
pmid: 38508725
pmc: PMC11144533
Tyramine, a trace monoamine produced from tyrosine by decarboxylation and found naturally in foods, plants, and animals, is a suspected virulence factor of Melissococcus plutonius that causes European foulbrood in honey bee brood. In the present study, we developed a method for quantitative analysis of tyramine in culture medium and honey bee larvae with a limit of quantitation of 3 ng/mL and a recovery rate of >97% using Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/Mass Spectrometry and deuterium-labeled tyramine, demonstrating for the first time that a highly virulent M. plutonius strain actually produces tyramine in infected larvae. This method will be an indispensable tool to elucidate the role of tyramine in European foulbrood pathogenesis in combination with exposure bioassays using artificially reared bee larvae.
Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Larva, Enterococcaceae, Animals, Tyramine, Bacteriology, Bees, Chromatography, Liquid
Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Larva, Enterococcaceae, Animals, Tyramine, Bacteriology, Bees, Chromatography, Liquid
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