| Literature DB >> 27546706 |
Luciana Tartaglione1, Marco Pelin2, Massimo Morpurgo3, Carmela Dell'Aversano4, Javier Montenegro5, Giuseppe Sacco6, Silvio Sosa2, James Davis Reimer7, Patrizia Ciminiello1, Aurelia Tubaro8.
Abstract
Palytoxin (PLTX) is a lethal natural toxin often found in Palythoa zoantharians that, together with its congeners, may induce adverse effects in humans after inhalation of toxic aerosols both in open-air and domestic environments, namely in the vicinity of public and private aquaria. In this study, we describe a poisoning of an aquarium hobbyist who was hospitalized after handling a PLTXs-containing zoantharian hexacoral. Furthermore, we provide evidence for water detoxification. The zoantharian was morphologically and genetically identified as Palythoa cf. toxica (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). Palytoxin itself and two new PLTX congeners, a hydroxyPLTX and a deoxyPLTX, were detected and structurally identified by liquid chromatography high resolution multiple stage mass spectrometry (LC-HRMSn, n = 1, 2). Total and individual toxins were quantified by LC-HRMS and sandwich ELISA both in the zoantharian (93.4 and 96.80 μg/g, respectively) and in the transport water (48.3 and 42.56 μg/mL, respectively), with an excellent mean bias of 1.3% between the techniques. Activated carbon adsorbed 99.7% of PLTXs contained in the seawater and this represents a good strategy for preventing aquarium hobbyist poisonings.Entities:
Keywords: Deoxypalytoxin; ELISA; Hydroxypalytoxin; LC-HRMS; Palytoxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27546706 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2016.08.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicon ISSN: 0041-0101 Impact factor: 3.033