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Brevetoxins
or
neurotoxic shellfish poisons
Certain microalgae produce a large lipophilic polyether toxin,
called brevetoxin. A long history of toxic microalgal blooms exists
in the Gulf of Mexico, blooms that have caused massive fish kills
and respiratory irritation in humans. It was later realised that the
toxin in these blooms could also be passed to humans via shellfish
to cause a syndrome named neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP).
Reports of NSP was limited for a long time to the Americas until
cases were reported in the early 1990’s in New Zealand and
Australia.
The NSP syndrome
Victims of NSP can be mistaken as suffering the fish-poisoning
syndrome, ciguatera. Typical symptoms are tingling in the face,
throat and digits, dizziness, fever, chills, muscle pains, abdominal
cramping, nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting, headache, reduced heart rate
and pupil dilation. There have been no reported fatalities from NSP
although the toxin kills test mammals when administered by various
routes, including orally.
The NSP causing toxins, the brevetoxins
The origin of these NSP inducing toxins is a dinoflagellate
called Ptychodiscus (formerly Gymnodiunium) brevis
from which the toxin name is derived. The brevetoxins are lipophilic
10- and 11-ring polyether chemicals. There two classes of
brevetoxins with the first containing 11 6-membered rings except for
two heptameric and an 8-membered ring (Figure 1). The second class
of brevetoxins have only 10 rings with great variation in the size
of the rings with the smallest having only five bonds and the
largest having nine (Figure 2). Solutions with a pH beyond 2 or 10
degrade the toxins.
Figure 1 Brevetoxin-A, a type I brevetoxin
Figure 2 Brevetoxin-B, a type II brevetoxin
How the toxins work
Brevetoxins bind to the ion channel of nerve and muscle tissue
that selectively allows sodium to pass into the cell. These sodium
channels open during an action potential in response to the change
in the electrical potential across the cell membrane. Brevetoxins
change the voltage at which this opening occurs nearer to the
voltage threshold that triggers this process essentially making the
sodium channel and consequently the affected nervous and muscular
cells hyperexcitable.
Further reading
Atchison WD, Luke VS, Narahashi T, Vogel SM (1986) Nerve membrane
sodium channels as the target site of brevetoxins at neuromuscular
junctions. Br J Pharmacol 189, 731-738.
Baden DG & Mende TJ (1982) Toxicity of two toxins from the
Florida red tide marine dinoflagellate, Ptychodiscus brevis.
Toxicon 20, 457-461.
Baden DG (1989) Brevetoxins: unique polyether dinoflagellate
toxins. FASEB J 3, 1807-1817.
Lin Y, Risk M, Ray SM, van Engen D, Clardy J, Golik J, James JC
& Nakanishi K (1981) Isolation and structure of brevetoxin B
from "red tide" dinoflagellate Ptychodiscus brevis
(Gymnodinium breve). J Am Chem Soc 103, 6773 -6776.
Lombet A, Bidard JN & Lazdunski M (1987) Ciguatoxin and
brevetoxins share a common receptor site on the neuronal
voltage-dependent Na+ channel. FEBS Lett 219, 355-359.
K Nakanishi (1985) The chemistry of brevetoxins: a review.
Toxicon 23, 473-479.
Ray SM & Aldrich DV (1965)
Gymnodinium breve:
induction of shellfish poisoning in chicks. Science 148, 1748 -1750.
e-mail: web@aims.gov.au
Page last updated -
December 18, 2008
©2000-2005 Australian Research Network for Algal Toxins
URL http://www.aims.gov.au/arnat
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