Release and degradation of amnesic shellfish poison from decaying Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries in presence of bacteria and organic matter

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:2007
Authors:J. A. Hagstrom, Graneli, E., Maneiro, I., Barreiro, A., Petermann, A., Svensen, C.
Journal:Harmful Algae
Volume:6
Pagination:175-188
Date Published:FEB
Keywords:amino-acid, Bacillariophyceae, bacteria, copepod acartia-clausi, degradation, diatom pseudonitzschia-australis, domoic acid, domoic acid production, growth, microcystin-lr, navis-varingica, nutrient condition, prince-edward-island, Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries, release, toxin
Abstract:

Domoic acid (DA), the neurotoxin produced by-diatoms such as Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries is water-soluble and can bioaccumulate, causing mass death of birds and marine mammals worldwide. Humans eating contaminated shellfish most commonly suffer from memory loss but mortalities have been recorded. The fate of particulate and dissolved DA released from the cells or added as standards was studied when incubated with different bacterial abundances, copepod faecal pellets, mussel pseudo-faeces and bottom sediment. Strains of P multiseries from Canada and Brazil were grown in non-axenic continuous monocultures with different nutrient conditions, or in a follow-up mesocosm experiment. Incubation lasted up to 75 days in the dark under quiescent conditions after the cells had been killed. Release of DA from decaying cells did not depend on bacterial abundance when the bacterial source was cultures of R multiseries, and the dissolved toxin was stable with bacteria from P multiseries cultures (at least 20 days with 1 x or 4 x bacterial concentration), or with a naturally occurring density of bacteria from surface waters of a known P multiseries bloom area (35 days). However, four-fold concentration of the natural bacterial consortium from the bloom site reduced the onset of DA degradation to 16 days. Thus, this study suggests that when testing toxin degradation by bacteria, it is important to use bacterial consortia from known bloom areas of Pseudo-nitzschia. Copepod faecal pellets did not affect DA degradation, whereas the presence of mussel pseudo-faeces and bottom sediment rapidly removed most of the toxin. We believe that the rapid removal of DA in the two latter treatments was due to higher bacterial abundance and the presence of enzymes from the mussels and/or associated bacteria that are important for the degradation process. The mechanisms underlying the observed effects on DA degradation with mussel pseudo-faeces and sediment require further research, but suggest interesting possibilities as a potential future mitigation technique. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

URL:<Go to ISI>://000244394600003
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith