Dinophysis toxins: causative organisms, distribution and fate in shellfish

Mar Drugs. 2014 Jan 20;12(1):394-461. doi: 10.3390/md12010394.

Abstract

Several Dinophysis species produce diarrhoetic toxins (okadaic acid and dinophysistoxins) and pectenotoxins, and cause gastointestinal illness, Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP), even at low cell densities (<103 cells·L⁻¹). They are the main threat, in terms of days of harvesting bans, to aquaculture in Northern Japan, Chile, and Europe. Toxicity and toxin profiles are very variable, more between strains than species. The distribution of DSP events mirrors that of shellfish production areas that have implemented toxin regulations, otherwise misinterpreted as bacterial or viral contamination. Field observations and laboratory experiments have shown that most of the toxins produced by Dinophysis are released into the medium, raising questions about the ecological role of extracelular toxins and their potential uptake by shellfish. Shellfish contamination results from a complex balance between food selection, adsorption, species-specific enzymatic transformations, and allometric processes. Highest risk areas are those combining Dinophysis strains with high cell content of okadaates, aquaculture with predominance of mytilids (good accumulators of toxins), and consumers who frequently include mussels in their diet. Regions including pectenotoxins in their regulated phycotoxins will suffer from much longer harvesting bans and from disloyal competition with production areas where these toxins have been deregulated.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Dinoflagellida / chemistry
  • Dinoflagellida / metabolism*
  • Humans
  • Marine Biology
  • Marine Toxins / analysis
  • Marine Toxins / biosynthesis
  • Marine Toxins / metabolism*
  • Marine Toxins / toxicity
  • Oceans and Seas
  • Population
  • Seawater / analysis
  • Shellfish / analysis*
  • Species Specificity

Substances

  • Marine Toxins