Abstract

Body temperature changes can modify an insect’s ability to fight infections by altering its immune activity. This work evaluated the impact of mild cold and heat thermal stress on the expression of different immune and heat shock genes in the species Bombus terrestris. Additionally, a thermal treatment was repeated under starvation to analyze a possible compromise of immune gene expression in favor of a thermal stress response when energetic resources are limited. Results pointed to a role of Hsc70 and Aha1 genes in tolerance to moderately high temperatures. Expression of the immune genes was not negatively affected by the cold or the heat treatments, and the receptor gene BGRP1 was upregulated with cold, possibly indicating an increase in the cellular immune activity. Under starvation, the effect of the heat and the cold treatments caused a higher upregulation in all genes analyzed, suggesting a synergistic effect of starvation and thermal stress on the activation of heat shock and immune gene expression.

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