| Literature DB >> 22069615 |
Arjen Gerssen1, Irene E Pol-Hofstad, Marnix Poelman, Patrick P J Mulder, Hester J van den Top, Jacob de Boer.
Abstract
Various species of algae can produce marine toxins under certain circumstances. These toxins can then accumulate in shellfish such as mussels, oysters and scallops. When these contaminated shellfish species are consumed severe intoxication can occur. The different types of syndromes that can occur after consumption of contaminated shellfish, the corresponding toxins and relevant legislation are discussed in this review. Amnesic Shellfish Poisoning (ASP), Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP), Diarrheic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP) and Azaspiracid Shellfish Poisoning (AZP) occur worldwide, Neurologic Shellfish Poisoning (NSP) is mainly limited to the USA and New Zealand while the toxins causing DSP and AZP occur most frequently in Europe. The latter two toxin groups are fat-soluble and can therefore also be classified as lipophilic marine toxins. A detailed overview of the official analytical methods used in the EU (mouse or rat bioassay) and the recently developed alternative methods for the lipophilic marine toxins is given. These alternative methods are based on functional assays, biochemical assays and chemical methods. From the literature it is clear that chemical methods offer the best potential to replace the animal tests that are still legislated worldwide. Finally, an overview is given of the situation of marine toxins in The Netherlands. The rat bioassay has been used for monitoring DSP and AZP toxins in The Netherlands since the 1970s. Nowadays, a combination of a chemical method and the rat bioassay is often used. In The Netherlands toxic events are mainly caused by DSP toxins, which have been found in Dutch shellfish for the first time in 1961, and have reoccurred at irregular intervals and in varying concentrations. From this review it is clear that considerable effort is being undertaken by various research groups to phase out the animal tests that are still used for the official routine monitoring programs.Entities:
Keywords: DSP toxins; alternative methods; lipophilic marine toxins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22069615 PMCID: PMC3153220 DOI: 10.3390/toxins2040878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Harmful algae blooms in the food chain and their routes of exposure.
Figure 2Chemical structure of domoic acid (DA).
Marine toxin groups and their responsible algae.
| Toxin group | Syndrome | Genus | Species | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domoic acid | ASP | Pseudo-nitzschia | australis, calliantha, cuspidata, delicatissima, fraudulenta, galaxiae, multiseries, multistriata, pseudodelicatissima, pungens, seriata, turgidula | [ | |
| Saxitoxins | PSP | Alexandrium | angustitabulatum, catenella, fundyense, lusitanicum, minutum, tamarense, tamiyavanichii | [ | |
| Gymnodinium | catenatum | [ | |||
| Pyrodinium | bahamense | [ | |||
| Brevetoxins | NSP | Karenia | brevis, brevisulcata, mikimotoi, selliformis, papilionacea | [ | |
| Chatonella | cf. verruculosa | [ | |||
| Okadaic acid and dinophysistoxins and pectenotoxins 1 | DSP | Phalacroma | rotundatum | [ | |
| Prorocentrum | arenarium, belizeanum, concavem, lima | [ | |||
| Dinophysis | acuminata, acuta, arenarium, caudate, fortii, mitra, norvegica, ovum, rotundata, sacculus, tripos | [ | |||
| Yessotoxins | Protoceratium | reticulatum | [ | ||
| Lingulodinium | polyedrum | [ | |||
| Gonyaulax | polyhedra | [ | |||
| Azaspiracids | AZP | Azadinium | spinosum | [ | |
| Spirolides | – | Alexandrium | ostenfeldii, peruvianum | [ | |
| Gymnodimines | – | Karenia | selliforme | [ | |
| Gymnodium | mikimotoi | [ |
1 Pectenotoxins do not induce diarrhea but are produced by the same algae as the DSP toxins okadaic acid and dinophysistoxins.
Figure 3Chemical structure of saxitoxin (STX).
Figure 4Chemical structure of brevetoxin (PbTx-2).
Figure 5Chemical structure of okadaic acid (OA).
Toxic equivalent factors of lipophilic marine toxins.
| Toxin | TEF | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Okadaic acid | 1 | [ |
| Dinophysistoxin-1 | 1 | |
| Dinophysistoxin-2 | 0.6 | |
| Yessotoxin | 1 | [ |
| 1a-homo yessotoxin | 1 | |
| 45-OH yessotoxin | 1 | |
| 45-OH 1a-homo yessotoxin | 0.5 | |
| Azaspiracid-1 | 1 | [ |
| Azaspiracid-2 | 1.8 | |
| Azaspiracid-3 | 1.4 |
Figure 6Chemical structure of pectenotoxin-2 (PTX2).
Figure 7Chemical structure of yessotoxin (YTX).
Figure 8Chemical structure of azaspiracid-1 (AZA1).
Figure 9Chemical structure of 13-desmethyl spirolide C (SPX1).
Figure 10Number of peer reviewed publications on lipophilic marine toxins in the last decade.
Methods used for the official control of lipophilic marine toxins.
| Country | OA and DTXs | AZAs | PTXs | YTXs | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Norway | MBA Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | MBA Chemical | [ |
| Sweden 1 | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | [ |
| Finland 2 | [ | ||||
| Denmark | MBA Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | [ |
| Ireland | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | [ |
| United Kingdom | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Germany | Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | [ |
| The Netherlands | RBA Chemical | RBA | |||
| Belgium | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| France | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Austria | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | [ |
| Portugal | MBA Chemical Biochemical | Chemical | Chemical | MBA | [ |
| Spain | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Italy | MBA Chemical | MBA | MBA | MBA Chemical | [ |
| Greece | MBA Chemical | MBA | [ | ||
| Turkey | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Canada | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| United States 3 | [ | ||||
| Venezuela | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Brazil 3 | [ | ||||
| Chili | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Uruguay | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Republic of Korea | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | MBA Chemical | [ |
| Japan | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| Thailand | MBA | MBA | MBA | MBA | [ |
| New Zealand | Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | Chemical | [ |
MBA = mouse bioassay, RBA = rat bioassay. Chemical = high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), LC fluometric detection (LC-FLD), LC mass spectrometry (LC-MS), LC tandem MS (LC-MS/MS). Biochemical = enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). 1 Samples for the MBA are analysed in Norway. 2 MBA test for DSP toxins is prohibited. 3 No monitoring established.
Permitted levels for lipophilic marine toxins.
| Country or Continent | OA, DTXs (µg/kg) | PTXs (µg/kg) | AZAs (µg/kg) | YTXs (µg/kg) | MBA (MU/kg) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EU | 160 WF | Included in OA | 160 | 1000 | [ | |
| United States | 200 | NR | NR | NR | [ | |
| Canada | 1000 DG | NR | NR | NR | [ | |
| Japan | 50 (~200 µg/kg OA-eq) | |||||
| Australia and New Zealand | 200 WF | NR | NR | NR | [ |
WF = Whole shellfish flesh, DG = digestive glands, NR = not regulated, MU = mouse unit.
Figure 11Number of Dinophysis acuminata cells per liter of sea waters on the corresponding years of toxin detection. The line indicates an action limit, above 100 cells per liter corrective measures are taken.