posted on 2015-12-15, 00:00authored byAntonella Penna, Federico Perini, Carmela Dell’Aversano, Samuela Capellacci, Luciana Tartaglione, Maria Grazia Giacobbe, Silvia Casabianca, Santiago Fraga, Patrizia Ciminiello, Michele Scardi
Paralytic shellfish
poisoning (PSP) is a serious human illness
caused by the ingestion of seafood contaminated with saxitoxin and
its derivatives (STXs). These toxins are produced by some species
of marine dinoflagellates within the genus Alexandrium. In the Mediterranean Sea, toxic Alexandrium spp.
blooms, especially of A. minutum, are frequent and
intense with negative impact to coastal ecosystem, aquaculture practices
and other economic activities. We conducted a large scale study on
the sxt gene and toxin distribution and content in
toxic dinoflagellate A. minutum of the Mediterranean
Sea using both quantitative PCR (qPCR) and HILIC-HRMS techniques.
We developed a new qPCR assay for the estimation of the sxtA1 gene copy number in seawater samples during a bloom event in Syracuse
Bay (Mediterranean Sea) with an analytical sensitivity of 2.0 ×
10° sxtA1 gene copy number per reaction. The
linear correlation between sxtA1 gene copy number
and microalgal abundance and between the sxtA1 gene
and STX content allowed us to rapidly determine the STX-producing
cell concentrations of two Alexandrium species in
environmental samples. In these samples, the amount of sxtA1 gene was in the range of 1.38 × 105 – 2.55
× 108 copies/L and the STX concentrations ranged from
41–201 nmol/L. This study described a potential PSP scenario
in the Mediterranean Sea.