| Literature DB >> 20714422 |
Vítor Ramos1, Vítor Vasconcelos.
Abstract
Palytoxin (PTX) is a potent marine toxin that was originally found in soft corals from tropical areas of the Pacific Ocean. Soon after, its occurrence was observed in numerous other marine organisms from the same ecological region. More recently, several analogs of PTX were discovered, remarkably all from species of the dinoflagellate genus Ostreopsis. Since these dinoflagellates are also found in other tropical and even in temperate regions, the formerly unsuspected broad distribution of these toxins was revealed. Toxicological studies with these compounds shows repeatedly low LD50 values in different mammals, revealing an acute toxic effect on several organs, as demonstrated by different routes of exposure. Bioassays tested for some marine invertebrates and evidences from environmental populations exposed to the toxins also give indications of the high impact that these compounds may have on natural food webs. The recognition of its wide distribution coupled with the poisoning effects that these toxins can have on animals and especially on humans have concerned the scientific community. In this paper, we review the current knowledge on the effects of PTX and its analogs on different organisms, exposing the impact that these toxins may have in coastal ecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: Ostreopsis; Palythoa; marine toxins; mascarenotoxin; ostreocin; ovatoxin; palytoxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20714422 PMCID: PMC2920541 DOI: 10.3390/md8072021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Structure of palytoxin (C129H227N3O52, molecular weight 2652.17 g mol−1).
Toxicity reference values of PTX and its analogs administered by several different routes on two model animals.
| Test animal | Toxin type | Toxin source | Route of exposure | 24 h LD50 (μg/kg) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat | Palytoxin | semi-purified material from | intravenous | 0.089 | [ |
| “ “ | “ “ | subcutaneous | 0.4 | [ | |
| “ “ | “ “ | intragastric | >40.0 | [ | |
| “ “ | “ “ | intraperitoneal | 0.63 | [ | |
| “ “ | “ “ | intratracheal | 0.36 | [ | |
| Mouse | Palytoxin | “ “ | intravenous | 0.045 | [ |
| “ “ | “ “ | subcutaneous | 1.39 | [ | |
| “ “ | oral | 510 | [ | ||
| “ “ | “ “ | 767 | [ | ||
| “ “ | “ “ | intraperitoneal | 0.295 | [ | |
| Ostreocin-D | “ “ | 0.75 | [ | ||
| Mascarenotoxin-A | “ “ | 900 | [ | ||
| Ostreotoxin | “ “ | 32100 | [ | ||
| N.T. | Ovatoxin-A | - | - | [ |
N.T.—not tested;
—classification as palytoxin analog not yet established.
Effects of PTX or analogs on the survival of several animal species.
| Animal species | Toxin type/Producer | Concentrations tested or cell densities | Toxicity/Observed effects | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | Ostreocin-D/ | 1000 cells per test well | tM50: 1 h not lethal within 24 h | [ |
| | “ “ | 250 cells per test well | tM50: 4 h | [ |
| “ “ | Ovatoxin-a?/ | 125 cells per test well | 100% mortality | [ |
| “ “ | “ “ | 542 – 906 cells mL−1 | 65%–100%, in 24 h | [ |
| | “ “ | Algal bloom outbreak | Exoskeleton changes | [ |
| | “ “ | Algal bloom outbreak | density ↓ 56–60% | [ |
| | Ostreocin-D/ | 0.3 pg PTX equivalents cell−1 | No toxic effects | [ |
| | “ “ | “ “ | “ “ | [ |
| | “ “ | “ “ | No toxic effects | [ |
| | Palytoxin/ | 2 ng PTX mL−1 | strongly ↓ phagocytosis | [ |
| | Palytoxin/ | 370 nM PTX | TL 50: 3 days | [ |
—values are calculated from data reported by authors;
TL50—lethal time for 50% of the tested organisms;
tM50—time until morbidity for 50% of the tested organisms.