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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Saxitoxin and its more than 50 analogues are a group of naturally occurring neurotoxins
collectively designated as paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs). PSTs are toxic to humans and maximum
legal limits in seafood have been implemented by regulatory authorities worldwide. In the European
Union, monitoring of PSTs is performed using the AOAC Official Method 2005.06, based on liquid
chromatography coupled with fluorescence detection (LC- FLD). However, this method has been
suggested to not effectively detect the emerging C-11 hydroxyl (M-toxins) and benzoate (GC-toxins)
analogues, with these analogues currently not being surveyed in monitoring programs. In this study,
a liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) method was used to search
for these emerging PSTs in mussels, Mytilus galloprovincialis, contaminated following an intense
Gymnodinium catenatum bloom in the Tagus estuary (Lisbon, Portugal). Five M-toxins (M1, M2, M6,
dcM6, and dcM10), but no GC-toxins, were detected in the mussels’ whole-soft body tissue. Moreover,
the classical PSTs (C1 to C4, GTX 4 to GTX6, dcGTX1 to dcGTX4, dcSTX, dcNEO, and STX) were also
found and comprised the largest fraction of the PSTs’ profile. The presence of unregulated PSTs in
edible mussel samples suggests potential seafood safety risks and urges further research to determine
the frequency of these analogues in seafood and their contribution to toxicity
Description
Keywords
M-toxins GC-toxins Gymnodinium catenatum Marine biotoxins Emergent toxin Seafood safety Occurrence data European waters Shellfish poisoning LC-HRMS
Citation
Marine Drugs 20 (11): 680 (2022)
Publisher
MDPI