Bees can turn back time and reverse brain ageing
Older honey bees effectively reverse brain aging when they take on
nest responsibilities typically handled by much younger bees, scientists
at Arizona State University have found. While current research on human
age-related dementia focuses on potential new drug treatments,
researchers said that these findings suggest that social interventions
may be used to slow or treat age related dementia.

A honey bee sitting on an almond flower in the historical
Badamwari in Srinagar |
In a study, a team of scientists from ASU and the Norwegian
University of Life Sciences, led by Gro Amdam, an associate professor in
ASU's School of Life Sciences, showed that tricking older, foraging bees
into doing social tasks inside the nest causes changes in the molecular
structure of their brains.
"We knew from previous research that when bees stay in the nest and
take care of larvae - the bee babies - they remain mentally competent
for as long as we observe them," said Amdam.
"However, after a period of nursing, bees fly out gathering food and
begin aging very quickly. After just two weeks, foraging bees have worn
wings, hairless bodies, and more importantly, lose brain function -
basically measured as the ability to learn new things. We wanted to find
out if there was plasticity in this aging pattern so we asked the
question, 'What would happen if we asked the foraging bees to take care
of larval babies again?" he noted.
During experiments, scientists removed all of the younger nurse bees
from the nest - leaving only the queen and babies. When the older,
foraging bees returned to the nest, activity diminished for several
days. Then, some of the old bees returned to searching for food, while
others cared for the nest and larvae. Researchers discovered that after
10 days, about 50 percent of the older bees caring for the nest and
larvae had significantly improved their ability to learn new things.
Amdam's international team not only saw a recovery in the bees'
ability to learn, they discovered a change in proteins in the bees'
brains. When comparing the brains of the bees that improved relative to
those that did not, two proteins noticeably changed.
They found Prx6, a protein also found in humans that can help protect
against dementia - including diseases such as Alzheimer's - and they
discovered a second and documented "chaperone" protein that protects
other proteins from being damaged when brain or other tissues are
exposed to cell-level stress.
In general, researchers are interested in creating a drug that could
help people maintain brain function, yet they may be facing up to 30
years of basic research and trials.
"Maybe social interventions - changing how you deal with your
surroundings - is something we can do today to help our brains stay
younger," said Amdam."Since the proteins being researched in people are
the same proteins bees have, these proteins may be able to spontaneously
respond to specific social experiences," he added.
But Amdam noted that further studies are needed on mammals such as
rats in order to investigate whether the same molecular changes that the
bees experience might be socially inducible in people.The study was
published in the scientific journal Experimental Gerontology.
- Hindustan Times
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