| Literature DB >> 23535394 |
Kathleen D Cusick1, Gary S Sayler.
Abstract
Marine neurotoxins are natural products produced by phytoplankton and select species of invertebrates and fish. These compounds interact with voltage-gated sodium, potassium and calcium channels and modulate the flux of these ions into various cell types. This review provides a summary of marine neurotoxins, including their structures, molecular targets and pharmacologies. Saxitoxin and its derivatives, collectively referred to as paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), are unique among neurotoxins in that they are found in both marine and freshwater environments by organisms inhabiting two kingdoms of life. Prokaryotic cyanobacteria are responsible for PST production in freshwater systems, while eukaryotic dinoflagellates are the main producers in marine waters. Bioaccumulation by filter-feeding bivalves and fish and subsequent transfer through the food web results in the potentially fatal human illnesses, paralytic shellfish poisoning and saxitoxin pufferfish poisoning. These illnesses are a result of saxitoxin's ability to bind to the voltage-gated sodium channel, blocking the passage of nerve impulses and leading to death via respiratory paralysis. Recent advances in saxitoxin research are discussed, including the molecular biology of toxin synthesis, new protein targets, association with metal-binding motifs and methods of detection. The eco-evolutionary role(s) PSTs may serve for phytoplankton species that produce them are also discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23535394 PMCID: PMC3705384 DOI: 10.3390/md11040991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Overview of major marine neurotoxins.
| Backbone Structure | LD50 a, ARfD b | Organisms | Health Impacts c | Molecular Target | Pharmacology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Alkaloid | 3–10, 0.7 | Dinoflagellates: | PSP | Voltage-gated ion channels: Na (site 1); K; Ca | Pore blocker |
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| Alkaloid | 8, n/a | Fish and Bacteria | PFP | Na channel site 1 | Pore blocker |
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| Polyketide | 170, n/a | Dinoflagellates | NSP | Na channel site 5 | enhanced activation and inactivation block |
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| Polyketide | 380–460, 50 | Dinoflagellates | NSP | Unknown | Unknown; proposed interaction with cytoskeletal |
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| Polyketide | 0.45, n/a | Dinoflagellates | CFP | Na channel site 5 | Shift in activation gating |
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| Polyketide | 0.15, n/a | Dinoflagellates | CFP | Cation channels | Channel modifier; allows non-selective ion passage |
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| Polyketide | 200, 280 | Dinoflagellates | AZP | K channel | Pore blocker |
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| Polyketide | 0.45, n/a | Dinoflagellate | PP | Na:K ATPase | Channel modifier; allows non-selective ion passage |
| Cooliatoxin: structure uncharacterized | |||||
| Polyketide | 1000, n/a | Dinoflagellate | Symptoms similar to NSP | Unknown | Unknown |
| Ostreotoxin 3: structure uncharacterized | |||||
| Polyketide | 32100, n/a | Dinoflagellate | Symptoms similar to NSP | Unknown | Inactivation gating modifier |
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| Amino acid | 3600, 100 | Diatom | ASP | Glutamate receptors | Depolarization via prolonged influx of Ca+ and Na+ |
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| Polypeptide | 12000–30000, n/a | Cone snails | N/A | Na channel sites 1 (μ) and 6 (δ); Ca channel (ω); nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (α) | Pore blocker (μ); prolonged channel opening (δ) |
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| Polypeptide | 170, n/a | Sea anemones | N/A | Na channel site 3; K channel | Slow/block channel inactivation |
a LD50 (Lethal Dose 50%, the concentration of a toxic substance in a medium at which 50% of the individuals in the test die) based on mouse i.p. injection with values presented as μg/kg. b ARfD, Acute Reference Dose: the estimated amount in food that can be ingested in a 24 h period or less with no appreciable health risk to humans. c PSP, Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning; PFP, Pufferfish Poisoning; NSP, Neurotoxic Shellfish Poisoning; AZP, Azaspiracid Poisoning; ASP, Amnesic Shellfish Poisoning, CFP; Ciguatoxin Fish Poisoning; PP Palytoxin Poisoning.
Molecular structure of saxitoxin and derivatives produced by marine dinoflagellates [1].
| Division | Name a | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STX | H | H | H | OCONH2 | |
| NeoSTX | OH | H | H | OCONH2 | |
| GTX1 | OH | OSO3− | H | OCONH2 | |
| Carbamate | GTX2 | H | OSO3− | H | OCONH2 |
| GTX3 | H | H | OSO3− | OCONH2 | |
| GTX4 | OH | H | OSO3− | OCONH2 | |
| GTX5 (B1) | H | H | H | OCONHSO3− | |
| GTX6 (B2) | OH | H | H | OCONHSO3− | |
| C1 | H | OSO3− | H | OCONHSO3− | |
| C2 | H | H | OSO3− | OCONHSO3− | |
| C3 | OH | OSO3− | H | OCONHSO3− | |
| C4 | OH | H | OSO3− | OCONHSO3− | |
| dcSTX | H | H | H | OH | |
| dcNeoSTX | OH | H | H | OH | |
| dcGTX1 | OH | OSO3− | H | OH | |
| Decarbamoyl | dcGTX2 | H | OSO3− | H | OH |
| dcGTX3 | H | H | OSO3− | OH | |
| dcGTX4 | OH | H | OSO3− | OH | |
| doSTX | H | H | H | H | |
| Deoxydecarbamoyl | doGTX2 | H | H | OSO3− | H |
| doGTX3 | H | OSO3− | H | H | |
a Abbreviations: STX, saxitoxin; GTX, gonyautoxin.
Figure 1Sodium channel architecture and binding sites of marine neurotoxins. Cylinders represent transmembrane helices that comprise the four homologous domains. Sites targeted by marine neurotoxins are indicated by gray call-outs. Modified from [27].
Figure 2Saxitoxin genes identified in dinoflagellates. Saxitoxin biosynthesis pathway and genes involved based on studies in cyanobacteria [37]. Dinoflagellate genes identified to date are listed below the figure and are cumulative results of high-throughput sequencing experiments.