Morphogenetic diversity and biotoxin composition of Alexandrium (Dinophyceae) in Irish coastal waters

Nicolas Touzet, Jose M. Franco, Robin Raine

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

107 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The diversity of Alexandrium spp. in Irish coastal waters was investigated through the morphological examination of resting cysts and vegetative cells, the determination of PSP toxin and spirolide profiles and the sequence analysis of rDNA genes. Six morphospecies were characterised: A. tamarense, A. minutum, A. ostenfeldii, A. peruvianum, A. tamutum and A. andersoni. Both PSP toxin producing and non-toxic strains of A. tamarense and A. minutum were observed. The average toxicities of toxic strains for both cultured species were respectively 11.3 (8.6 S.D.) and 2.3 (0.5 S.D.) pg STX equiv. cell-1. Alexandrium ostenfeldii and A. peruvianum did not synthesise PSP toxins but HPLC-MS analysis of two strains showed distinct spirolide profiles. A cyst-derived culture of A. peruvianum from Lough Swilly mainly produced spirolides 13 desmethyl-C and 13 desmethyl-D whereas one of A. ostenfeldii, from Bantry Bay, produced spirolides C and D. Species identification was confirmed through the analyses of SSU, ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 and LSU rDNA genes. Some nucleotide variability was observed among clones of toxic strains of A. tamarense, which all clustered within the North American clade. However, rDNA sequencing did not allow discrimination between the toxic and non-toxic forms of A. minutum. Phylogenetic analysis also permitted the differentiation of A. ostenfeldii from A. peruvianum. Resting cysts of PSP toxin producing Alexandrium species were found in Cork Harbour and Belfast Lough, locations where shellfish contamination events have occurred in the past, highlighting the potential for the initiation of harmful blooms from cyst beds. The finding of supposedly non-toxic and biotoxin-producing Alexandrium species near aquaculture production sites will necessitate the use of reliable discriminative methods in phytoplankton monitoring.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)782-797
Number of pages16
JournalHarmful Algae
Volume7
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2008
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Alexandrium
  • HAB
  • PSP toxins
  • Resting cysts
  • Spirolides
  • rDNA

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