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1.
Contamination of shellfish with paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins produced by Alexandrium species poses a potential threat to the sustainability of the Scottish aquaculture industry. Routine LM analysis of water samples from around the Scottish coast has previously identified Alexandrium (Dinophyceae) as a regular part of the spring and summer phytoplankton communities in Scottish coastal waters. In this study, Alexandrium tamarense (M. Lebour) Balech isolated from sediment and water samples was established in laboratory culture. Species identification of these isolates was confirmed using thecal plate dissections and by molecular characterization based on their LSU and, in some cases, ITS rDNA sequence. Molecular characterization and phylogenetic analysis showed the presence of two ribotypes of A. tamarense: Group I (North American ribotype) and Group III (Western European ribotype). Assessment of PSP toxin production using hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (HILIC–MS/MS) showed that A. tamarense Group I produced a complex array of toxins (~2,000 fg STX equivalents · cell?1) with the major toxins being C2, neosaxitoxin (NEO), saxitoxin (STX), gonyautoxin‐4 (GTX‐4), and GTX‐3, while A. tamarense Group III did not produce toxins. Historically, it was considered that all Alexandrium species occurring in Scottish waters produce potent PSP toxins. This study has highlighted the presence of both PSP toxin‐producing and benign species of A. tamarense and questions the ecological significance of this finding.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Nutritional and environmental conditions were characterized for a batch culture of the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense HK9301 isolated from the South China Sea for its growth (cells ml−1), cellular toxin content (Qt in fmol cell−1) and toxin composition (mol%). Under a nutrient replete condition, Qt increased with cell growth and peaked at the late stationary phase. Toxin content increased with the nitrate concentration in the culture while it reached a maximum at 5 μM phosphate. When nitrate was replaced with ammonia, Qt decreased by 4.5-fold. Salinity and light intensity were important factors affecting Qt. The latter increased two-fold over the range of salinity from 15 to 30‰, while decreased 38% as light intensity increased from 80 to 220 μE m−2 s−1. Toxin composition varied with growth phase and culture conditions. In nutrient replete cultures, toxin composition varied greatly in the early growth phase (first 3 days) and then C1/C2, C3/C4 and GTX1 remained relatively constant while GTX4 increased from 32 to 46% and GTX5 decreased from 28 to 15%. In general, the composition of GTXs was affected in a much greater extent than C toxins by changes in nutrient conditions, salinity and light intensity. This is especially true with GTX4 and GTX5. These data indicate that the cellular toxin content and toxin composition of A. tamarense HK9301 are not constant, but that they vary with growth phase and culture conditions. Use of toxin composition to identify a toxigenic marine dinoflagellate is not always valid. The data also reveal that high salinity and low light intensity, together with high nitrate and low phosphate concentrations, would favor toxin production by this species.  相似文献   

4.
Clonal variability in exponential growth rate and production of secondary metabolites was determined from clonal isolates of Alexandrium tamarense originating from a single geographical population from the east coast of Scotland. To assess variability in the selected phenotypic characteristics over a wide spectrum, 10 clones were chosen for experimentation from 67 clonal isolates pre-screened for their lytic capacity in a standardized bioassay with the cryptophyte Rhodomonas salina. Specific growth rates (μ) of the 10 clonal isolates ranged from 0.28 to 0.46 d−1 and were significantly different among clones. Cell content (fmol cell−1) and composition (mol%) of paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), analyzed by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection (LC–FD), varied widely among these isolates, with total PST quotas ranging from 20 to 89 fmol cell−1. Except for strain 3, the toxins C1/C2, neosaxitoxin (NEO), saxitoxin (STX), and gonyautoxins-1 and -4 (GTX1/GTX4), were consistently the most relatively abundant, with lesser amounts of GTX2/GTX3 evident among all isolates. Only clone 3 contained >20 mol% of toxin B1, with C1/C2, GTX2/GTX3 and NEO in almost equimolar ratios.Eight of the 10 clones caused cell lysis of both R. salina and the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina, as quantified from the dose–response curves from short-term (24 h) co-incubation bioassays. For two clones, no significant mortality even at high Alexandrium cell concentrations (ca. 104 mL−1) was observed. Allelochemical activity expressed as EC50 values, defined as the Alexandrium cell concentration causing lysis of 50% of target cells, varied by about an order of magnitude and was significantly different among clones. No correlation was observed between growth rate und allelochemical potency (as EC50) indicating that at least under non-limiting growth conditions no obvious growth reducing costs are associated with the production of allelochemically active secondary metabolites.  相似文献   

5.
To investigate harmful effects of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium species on microzooplankton, the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis was chosen as an assay species, and tested with 10 strains of Alexandrium including one known non-PSP-producer (Alexandrium tamarense, AT-6). HPLC analysis confirmed the PSP-content of the various strains: Alexandrium lusitanicum, Alexandrium minutum and Alexandrium tamarense (ATHK, AT5-1, AT5-3, ATCI02, ATCI03) used in the experiment were PSP-producers. No PSP toxins were detected in the strains Alexandrium sp1, Alexandrium sp2.Exposing rotifer populations to the densities of 2000 cells ml−1 of each of these 10 Alexandrium strains revealed that the (non-PSP) A. tamarense (AT-6) and two other PSP-producing algae: A. lusitanicum, A. minutum, did not appear to adversely impact rotifer populations. Rotifers exposed to these three strains were able to maintain their population numbers, and in some cases, increase them. Although some increases in rotifer population growth following exposures to these three algal species were noted, the rate was less than for the non-exposed control rotifer groups.In contrast, the remaining seven algal strains (A. tamarense ATHK, AT5-1, AT5-3, ATCI02, ATCI03; also Alexandrium sp1 and Alexandrium sp2) all have adverse effects on the rotifers. Dosing rotifers with respective algal cell densities of 2000 cells ml−1 each, for Alexandrium sp1, Alexandrium sp2, and A. tamarense strains ATHK and ATCI03 showed mean lethal time (LT50) on rotifer populations of 21, 28, 29, and 36h, respectively. The remaining three species (A. tamarense strains AT5-1, AT5-3, ATCI02) caused respective mean rotifer LT50s of 56, 56, and 71 h, compared to 160 h for the unexposed “starved control” rotifers. Experiments to determine ingestion rates for the rotifers, based on changes in their Chlorophyll a content, showed that the rotifers could feed on A. lusitanicum, A. minutum and A. tamarense strain AT-6, but could graze to little or no extent upon algal cells of the other seven strains. The effects on rotifers exposed to different cell densities, fractions, and growth phases of A. tamarense algal culture were respectively compared. It was found that only the whole algal cells had lethal effects, with strongest impact being shown by the early exponential growth phase of A. tamarense. The results indicate that some toxic mechanism(s), other than PSP and present in whole algal cells, might be responsible for the adverse effects on the exposed rotifers.  相似文献   

6.
Detection of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins in scallops from the west coast of Greenland exceeding the 800 μg toxin/kg shellfish limit led to an investigation with the aim of finding the responsible organism(s). Three strains of Alexandrium Halim were established from single cell isolations. Morphological identification of the strains and determination of their position within the genus by LSU rDNA sequences was carried out. Light microscopy revealed that the three strains was of the Alexandrium tamarense morphotype, and bayesian and neighbor-joining analyses of the LSU rDNA sequences placed them within Group I of the A. tamarense species complex. The toxicity and toxin profiles of the strains were measured by liquid chromatography fluorescence detection (LC-FD) and their identity was confirmed by liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). The three strains all turned out to be toxic and all produced large proportions (>60% total mol) of gonyautoxins 1 and 4 (GTX1/GTX4). This is the first record of saxitoxin producers from western Greenland. The toxin profiles were atypical for A. tamarense in their absence of N-sulfocarbanoyl C1/C2 or B1/B2 toxins. Rather the high molar percentage of GTX1/GTX4, the lesser amounts of only carbamoyl toxins and the absence of decarbamoyl derivatives are more characteristic features of A. minutum strains. This may indicate that the genetically determined toxin profiles in Alexandrium species are more complex than previously appreciated.  相似文献   

7.
Mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) were experimentally contaminated with paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins by being fed with the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense, and changes in toxin content and specific composition during the decontamination period were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Toxins excreted by the mussels into the seawater were also recovered using an activated charcoal column and analyzed by HPLC. The predominant toxins in A. tamarense, mussels, and seawater were the N-sulfocarbamoyl-11-hydrosulfate toxins (C1,2) and carbamate gonyautoxins-1,4 (GTX1,4). There were no remarkable differences in the relative proportions of the predominant toxins within A. tamarense, mussels and seawater. Because the relative proportion of the various toxin analogues excreted by the mussels was similar to that within their tissues during detoxification, it appeared that the selective release of particular toxins by the mussels was unlikely. The total amount of toxin lost from mussels was nearly equal to that which was found dissolved in the seawater, suggesting that, at least the early stages of mussel detoxification, most losses can be accounted for by excretion.  相似文献   

8.
The profile of tetrahydropurine neurotoxins associated with paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) was determined from a Chilean strain of the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella. The toxin composition was compared with that of toxic shellfish, presumably contaminated by natural blooms of A. catenella from the same region in southern Chile. Ion pair-liquid chromatography with post-column derivatization and fluorescence detection (LC-FD) was employed for relative quantitative analysis of the toxin components, whereas unambiguous identification of the toxins was confirmed by tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). In the dinoflagellate strain from Chile, the N-sulfocarbamoyl derivatives (C1/C2, B1) and the carbamoyl gonyautoxins GTX1/GTX4 comprise >90% of the total PSP toxin content on a molar basis. This toxin composition is consistent with that determined for A. catenella populations from the Pacific coast in the northern hemisphere. The characteristic toxin profile is also reflected in the shellfish, but with evidence of epimerization and metabolic transformations of C1 and C2 to GTX2 and GTX3, respectively. This work represents the first unequivocal identification and confirmation of such PSP toxin components from the Chilean coast.  相似文献   

9.
A study was carried out to determine the presence of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxin-producing dinoflagellates in the coastal waters of Peninsula Malaysia. This followed first ever occurrences of PSP in the Straits of Malacca and the northeast coast of the peninsula. The toxic tropical dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense var. compressum was never encountered in any of the plankton samples. On the other hand, five species of Alexandrium were found. They were Alexandrium affine, Alexandrium leei, Alexandrium minutum, Alexandrium tamarense and Alexandrium tamiyavanichii. Not all species were present at all sites. A. tamiyavanichii was present only in the central to southern parts of the Straits of Malacca. A. tamarense was found in the northern part of the straits, while A. minutum was only found in samples from the northeast coast of the peninsula. A. leei and A. affine were found in both the north and south of the straits. Cultured isolates of A. minutum and A. tamiyavanichii were proven toxic by the receptor binding assay for PSP toxins but A. tamarense clones were not toxic. Mean toxin content for the A. tamiyavanichii and A. minutum clones were 26 and 15 fmol per cell STX equivalent, respectively. This study has provided evidence on the presence of PSP toxin-producing Alexandrium species in Malaysian waters which suggests that PSP could increase in importance in the future.  相似文献   

10.
The diversity of Alexandrium spp. in Irish coastal waters was investigated through the morphological examination of resting cysts and vegetative cells, the determination of PSP toxin and spirolide profiles and the sequence analysis of rDNA genes. Six morphospecies were characterised: A. tamarense, A. minutum, A. ostenfeldii, A. peruvianum, A. tamutum and A. andersoni. Both PSP toxin producing and non-toxic strains of A. tamarense and A. minutum were observed. The average toxicities of toxic strains for both cultured species were respectively 11.3 (8.6 S.D.) and 2.3 (0.5 S.D.) pg STX equiv. cell−1. Alexandrium ostenfeldii and A. peruvianum did not synthesise PSP toxins but HPLC–MS analysis of two strains showed distinct spirolide profiles. A cyst-derived culture of A. peruvianum from Lough Swilly mainly produced spirolides 13 desmethyl-C and 13 desmethyl-D whereas one of A. ostenfeldii, from Bantry Bay, produced spirolides C and D. Species identification was confirmed through the analyses of SSU, ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 and LSU rDNA genes. Some nucleotide variability was observed among clones of toxic strains of A. tamarense, which all clustered within the North American clade. However, rDNA sequencing did not allow discrimination between the toxic and non-toxic forms of A. minutum. Phylogenetic analysis also permitted the differentiation of A. ostenfeldii from A. peruvianum. Resting cysts of PSP toxin producing Alexandrium species were found in Cork Harbour and Belfast Lough, locations where shellfish contamination events have occurred in the past, highlighting the potential for the initiation of harmful blooms from cyst beds. The finding of supposedly non-toxic and biotoxin-producing Alexandrium species near aquaculture production sites will necessitate the use of reliable discriminative methods in phytoplankton monitoring.  相似文献   

11.
The composition of the paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) of five Alexandrium tamarense strains isolated from the coastal waters of southern China and one Alexandrium minutum strain from Taiwan Island were investigated. A. tamarense CI01 and A. tamarense Dapeng predominantly produced C2 toxin (over 90%) with trace amounts of C1 toxin (C1), gonyautoxin-2 (GTX2) and GTX3; two strains of A. tamarense HK9301 maintained in different locations produced C1-4 toxins and GTX1, 4, 5 and 6; no PSTs were found in A. tamarense NEW, while A. minutum TW produced only GTX1-4. The toxin compositions of cultured A. tamarense strains did not vary as much during different growth phases as did the toxin composition of A. minutum TW. The toxin compositions of A. tamarense HK9301-1 did not change significantly under different salinity, light intensity, and nitrate and phosphate levels in the culture medium, although the toxin productivity varied expectably. Another strain HK9301-2 maintained in a different location produced much less toxins with a considerably different toxin composition. Under similar culture maintenance conditions for 3 years, the toxin profiles of A. tamarense HK9301-1 did not change as much as did A. tamarense CI01. Our results indicate that toxin compositions of the dinoflagellate strains are strain-specific and are subject to influence by nutritional and environmental conditions but not as much by the growth phase. Use of toxin composition in identifying a toxigenic strain requires special caution.  相似文献   

12.
This work describes and compares the seasonal variability of toxin profiles and content, estimated by LC–MS analyses, in picked cell of Dinophysis acuta Ehrenberg, in plankton concentrates rich in this species, and in extracellular lipophilic toxins collected by adsorbent resins during weekly sampling in a Galician ría (Western Iberia) from October 2005 to January 2006. Picked cells of D. acuta—which exhibited a fairly stable OA:DTX2 ratio, close to 3:2, but a variable okadaates:PTX2 ratio—showed a 9-fold variation in cell toxin quota, which was partly related to cellular volume, with maximum values (19 pg cell−1) observed during the exponential decline of the population. Large differences in toxin profiles and content were observed between picked cells and plankton concentrates (up to 73 pg cell−1 in the latter), that were most conspicuous after the bloom decline. The toxin profile of picked cells was more similar to that observed in the adsorbent resins than to the profiles of plankton concentrates. Their continued detection several weeks after the disappearance of Dinophysis spp. indicates that these toxins may take a long time to be degraded. It is concluded that analyses of picked-cells are essential to determine the contribution of each species of Dinophysis to a toxic outbreak. Estimates of cellular toxin content from plankton concentrates can lead to considerable overestimates after Dinophysis blooms decay due to extracellular toxins that persist in the water column, possibly bound to organic aggregates and detritus, and are retained (>0.22 μm) in the filters.  相似文献   

13.
Substantial mortalities of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) at two aquaculture sites in Long Island Sound, off Grand Manan Island, Bay of Fundy (BoF) (New Brunswick, Canada) in September 2003, were associated with a bloom of Alexandrium fundyense (>3 × 105 cells L−1), a dinoflagellate alga that produces toxins which cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP). Cells of A. fundyense collected from surface waters while fish were dying had total paralytic shellfish (PS) toxin concentrations of 70.6 pg STX equiv. (saxitoxin equivalents) cell−1 and PS toxin profiles rich in carbamate toxins (78.2%). The zooplankton sampled contained PS toxins (63.1 pg STX equiv. g−1 wet wt) and the toxin profile matched that of A. fundyense cells.Mean PS toxin levels were low (<4 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) in stomach, gill and muscle tissues of moribund salmon, suggesting that PS toxins are very lethal to salmon.The PS toxin concentrations in blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) growing on the salmon cages (37; 526 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) were the highest recorded to date from this region. Their PS toxin profiles showed enhanced carbamate contents (85.5%) compared with that found in A. fundyense. Blue mussels collected from an adjacent Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) monitoring site in Grand Manan had PS toxin concentrations of 4214 and 150 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt in late September and December, respectively, well above the regulatory limit (RL), and horse mussels (Modiolus modiolus) collected in late September had PS toxin concentrations of 2357 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt. Detoxification under laboratory conditions suggested that blue mussels may require up to 19 weeks for elimination below RL when they accumulate these high concentrations of PS toxins. This depuration period may be shorter in the field.PS toxin levels above RL were detected in hepatopancreatic tissues of lobster (Homarus americanus), with lower levels (<16 μg STX equiv. 100 g−1 wet wt) in tail muscle and gills.These results illustrate the movement of PS toxins through the marine food chain following an A. fundyense bloom in the BoF, and support earlier studies suggesting that kills from the region of zooplanktivorous fish, such as herring (Clupea harengus harengus), can be attributed to blooms of A. fundyense. This is the first reported incident of PSP associated with mortalities of caged Atlantic salmon in the BoF. Analyses of muscle tissues and viscera from the affected salmon indicated that any portion would not be a health hazard if consumed.  相似文献   

14.
Dinoflagellates of the genus Alexandrium are known producers of paralytic shellfish toxins. Species within the genus have similar phenotypes making morphological identification problematical. The use of Alexandrium rDNA sequence data is therefore increasing, resulting in the improved resolution of evolutionary relationships by phylogenetic inferences. However, the true branching pattern within Alexandrium remains unresolved, with minimal support shown for the main phylogentic branch. The aim of this study is to improve phylogenetic resolution via a concatenated rDNA approach with a broad sample of taxa, allowing inference of the evolutionary pattern between species and toxins. 27 Alexandrium strains from 10 species were tested with HPLC for PSP toxin presence and additionally sequenced for 18S, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and 28S rDNA before being phylogenetically inferred together with all available orthologous sequences from NCBI. The resulting alignment is the largest to date for the genus, in terms of both inferred characters and taxa, thus allowing for the improved phylogenetic resolution of evolutionary patterns there in. No phylogenetic pattern between PSP producing and non-producing strains could be established, however the terminal tamarense complex was shown to produce more PSP analogues than basal clades. Additionally, we distinguish a high number of polymorphic regions between the two copies of A. fundyense rDNA, thus allowing us to demonstrate the presence of chimeric sequences within GenBank, as well as a possible over estimation of diversification within the tamarense complex.  相似文献   

15.
The toxin profiles of three isolates and natural populations of the PSP agentAlexandrium minutum from several Galician rías (NW Spain) was obtained by HPLC. The toxin content of cultures ofA. minutum is dominated by GTX4 (80–90%) and GTX4 (10–15%) with small amounts of GTX3 and GTX2 (less than 3% of each); similar results were obtained for natural populations ofAlexandrium from three different Galician rías, where a mixture ofA. lusitanicum Balech andA. minutum can occur. Important quantitative differences were found between the three isolates, one being highly and two weakly toxic. The results obtained from these isolates and natural populations ofAlexandrium were very similar to those obtained from HPLC analyses of mussels intoxicated during a PSP outbreak in Ría de Ares (Rías Altas) in 1984, confirming thatA. minutum (previously identified asGonyaulax tamarensis Lebour andAlexandrium lusitanicum) was the PSP agent during the toxic outbreak in May 1984. Toxin profiles obtained from natural populations during different PSP outbreaks in different rías and from cultures are fairly consistent and suggest that at least from the toxin point of view,A. lusitanicum andA. minutum are identical, and that the toxin profile ofA. minutum from Galicia can be used as a biochemical marker.  相似文献   

16.
The phylogenetic relationship of the thecate PSP-toxin producing dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamiyavanichii Balech to other species of Alexandrium was studied based on nucleotide sequences of the ITS1, ITS2, 5.8S, 18S and 28S subunits of the ribosomal RNA gene. These are the first such sequences available for A. tamiyavanichii, which is one of the producers of paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins in tropical waters. Based on the nucleotide sequences of the 28S, 18S and 5.8S subunits of the rRNA gene, A. tamiyavanichii grouped together with A. tamarense, A. catenella and A. fundyense. More interestingly, A. tamiyavanichii was most closely affiliated to A. tamarense isolates from Thailand. This result reaffirmed conclusions from previous studies that, for the A. tamarense/fundyense/catenella species complex, geographical origin rather than morphology seems to determine genetic relatedness. Results of this study also suggest that A. tamiyavanichii most probably belongs to the same species complex. Ribosomal RNA gene sequences do not separate the PSP toxin producing from the non-producing species of Alexandrium.  相似文献   

17.
The marine dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium (Halim) Balech contains members that produce highly potent phycotoxins (PSP toxins or spirolides) as well as lytic substances and other allelochemicals of unknown structure and ecological significance. One isolate each of six Alexandrium species (A. tamarense, A. ostenfeldii, A. lusitanicum, A. minutum, A. catenella, A. taylori), of the closely related gonyaulacoid dinoflagellate Fragilidium subglobosum, and of the peridinioid Scrippsiella trochoidea were tested in 24 h co-incubation experiments for their short-term deleterious effects on a diversity of marine protists. Both autotrophs (Rhodomonas salina, Dunaliella salina, Thalassiosira weissflogii) and heterotrophs (Oxyrrhis marina, Amphidinium crassum, Rimostrombidium caudatum) were included as target species. All donor isolates except S. trochoidea exhibited lytic effects on at least some target species. Lytic effects were observed with all Alexandrium species, for both whole cell samples and culture filtrate (<10 μm and <0.2 μm). Antibiotic treated cultures with drastically reduced bacterial numbers did not show any general reduction in lytic capacity, therefore direct involvement of extracellular bacteria in allelochemical production is unlikely. Values of EC50, defined as the Alexandrium cell concentration causing lysis of 50% of target cells, differed by two orders of magnitude depending on the donor/target combination, from 3.1 × 103 cells ml−1 (A. minutum/O. marina) down to 0.02 × 103 cells ml−1 (A. catenella/D. salina). Within the array of nine donor Alexandrium/target combinations, variable ratios in EC50 values between donor/target combination cannot be explained by quantitative differences in allelochemical production, but rather indicate qualitative differences in the composition of compounds produced by different Alexandrium strains. In conclusion, our study confirms the widespread lytic capacity within the genus Alexandrium, although allelochemical effects are not restricted to this genus. Allelochemical interactions mediated by such lytic substances may be significant in explaining the formation and maintenance of Alexandrium blooms through direct destructive effects on competing algae or unicellular grazers.  相似文献   

18.
The genetic diversity of the bacterial community associated with Alexandrium tamarense blooms was studied in blooms of the toxic dinoflagellates in the waters around the Orkney Isles and the Firth of Forth (Scotland). For toxin and molecular analysis of the bacterial communities associated with the toxic bloom, water samples were taken in 1998 and 1999 from A. tamarense blooms. The bacterial community structure, as determined by DGGE (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis) showed clear differences between all three investigated size fractions (dinoflagellate-associated bacteria, attached bacteria and free-living bacteria), with high diversity within each sample. DNA sequence analysis of the dominant and most frequent DGGE bands revealed the dominance of Proteobacteria, mainly of the Roseobacter clade, with similarities of 91–99%. Moreover, DGGE bands occurring at the same position in the gel throughout in most samples corroborate the presence of several specific Proteobacteria of the Roseobacter clade. Overall, 500 bacteria were isolated from the bloom and partly phylogenetically analysed. They were members of two prokaryotic phyla, the Proteobacteria and the Bacteroidetes, related to Proteobacteria of the and subdivisions (Alteromonas, Pseudoalteromonas and Colwellia). All bacteria were tested for the production of sodium channel blocking (SCB) toxins using mouse neuroblastoma assay. No production of SCB toxins was found and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis confirmed these results. The content of total paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxin in the water samples, as measured within the toxic dinoflagellate blooms using HPLC, ranged from 53 to 2191 ng PSP l–1 in 1998 and from 0 to 478 ng PSP l–1 in 1999. Changes in PSP toxin content were not accompanied by changes of DGGE band patterns. We therefore presume that the bacterial groups identified in this study were not exclusively associated with toxic A. tamarense, but were generally associated with the phytoplankton.An erratum to this article can be found at Communicated by H.-D. Franke  相似文献   

19.
In December 2001, a large-scale bloom of the paralytic shellfish toxin-producing dinoflagellate, Alexandrium tamiyavanichii Balech (Dinophyceae) was observed in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan. During the bloom, we conducted a field survey in the Seto Inland Sea and collected samples of bloom water in order to assess the toxicity and toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii. The results of the field survey indicated that A. tamiyavanichii was observed frequently at water temperatures between 17.8 and 20.0 °C, and the maximum cell density at the four localities was ca. 2000 cells L?1 (Fukuyama Bay). To elucidate the toxicity and toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii, 54 strains (28 strains from Fukuyama Bay, 12 strains from Kasato Bay, 9 strains from Uchinoumi, and 5 strains from Inokushi Bay) were established from bloom water samples, and were then subject of toxin analyses via fluorescence HPLC. The toxic components of A. tamiyavanichii showed that N-sulfocarbamoyl (C-) 2 and Gonyautoxins (GTX) 4 were the principal toxins and C3+4, GTX 2+3, GTX 5, neosaxitoxin (neoSTX) and saxitoxin (STX) were minor components. The toxicity of the A. tamiyavanichii cells was higher than that of the other toxic species, A. tamarense and A. catenella. The toxic components in all strains among the four localities were closely related, and thus the recent A. tamiyavanichii population in the Seto Inland Sea appears to originate from a single population.  相似文献   

20.
The distribution of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense Lebour has apparently expanded within the southern hemisphere during the last 2 decades. Toxic blooms of A. tamarense were recorded in Argentinean coastal waters since 1980; however, the first documented bloom in southern Brazil was in 1996. In this study, 13 strains of A. tamarense from southern Brazil were isolated and kept in culture. Phylogenetic analysis using RFLP and DNA sequences of the D1–D2 region of large subunit ribosomal DNA (rDNA) clearly indicates that Brazilian strains are most closely related to other South American strains. The strains from South America are placed firmly within a phylogenetic clade which contains strains from North America, northern Europe and northern Asia, previously called the North American clade. Possible dispersal hypotheses are discussed. The cultures were also analyzed for saxitoxin and its derivatives by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The main saxitoxin groups found were the low toxicity N-sulfocarbamoyl group, C1, 2 (30–84%), followed by the high potency carbamate toxins, gonyautoxins 1, 4 (6.6–55%), gonyautoxins 2, 3 (0.3–29%), neosaxitoxin (1.4–24%) and saxitoxin (0–4.4%). The toxin composition is similar to that of other strains from South America, supporting a close relationship between A. tamarense from southern Brazil and other areas of South America. Toxicity values were variable (7.07–65.92 pg STX cell−1), with the higher range falling among the most toxic values recorded for cultures of A. tamarense, indicating the significant risk for shellfish contamination and human intoxication during blooms of this species along the southern Brazilian coast.  相似文献   

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