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Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum

Vulcanodinium rugosum, a recently described dinoflagellate species producing a potent neurotoxin (pinnatoxin G), has been identified in French Mediterranean lagoons and was responsible for recurrent episodes of shellfish toxicity detected by mouse bioassay. Until now, the biology and physiology of V...

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Autores principales: Abadie, Eric, Kaci, Lamia, Berteaux, Tom, Hess, Philipp, Sechet, Véronique, Masseret, Estelle, Rolland, Jean Luc, Laabir, Mohamed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4584345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26404325
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md13095642
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author Abadie, Eric
Kaci, Lamia
Berteaux, Tom
Hess, Philipp
Sechet, Véronique
Masseret, Estelle
Rolland, Jean Luc
Laabir, Mohamed
author_facet Abadie, Eric
Kaci, Lamia
Berteaux, Tom
Hess, Philipp
Sechet, Véronique
Masseret, Estelle
Rolland, Jean Luc
Laabir, Mohamed
author_sort Abadie, Eric
collection PubMed
description Vulcanodinium rugosum, a recently described dinoflagellate species producing a potent neurotoxin (pinnatoxin G), has been identified in French Mediterranean lagoons and was responsible for recurrent episodes of shellfish toxicity detected by mouse bioassay. Until now, the biology and physiology of V. rugosum have not been fully investigated. We studied the growth characteristics and toxicity of a V. rugosum strain (IFR-VRU-01), isolated in the Ingril lagoon in June 2009 (North-Western French Mediterranean Sea). It was cultivated in Enriched Natural Sea Water (ENSW) with organic (urea) and inorganic (ammonium and nitrate) nitrogen, at a temperature of 25 °C and irradiance of 100 μmol/m(2)·s(−1). Results showed that ammonium was assimilated by cells more rapidly than nitrate and urea. V. rugosum is thus an osmotrophic species using urea. Consequently, this nitrogen form could contribute to the growth of this dinoflagellate species in the natural environment. There was no significant difference (Anova, p = 0.856) between the growth rate of V. rugosum cultivated with ammonium (0.28 ± 0.11 day(−1)), urea (0.26 ± 0.08 day(−1)) and nitrate (0.24 ± 0.01 day(−1)). However, the production of chlorophyll a and pinnatoxin G was significantly lower with urea as a nitrogen source (Anova, p < 0.027), suggesting that nutritional conditions prevailing at the moment of the bloom could determine the cellular toxicity of V. rugosum and therefore the toxicity measured in contaminated mollusks. The relatively low growth rate (≤0.28 day(−1)) and the capacity of this species to continuously produce temporary cysts could explain why cell densities of this species in the water column are typically low (≤20,000 cells/L).
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spelling pubmed-45843452015-10-05 Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum Abadie, Eric Kaci, Lamia Berteaux, Tom Hess, Philipp Sechet, Véronique Masseret, Estelle Rolland, Jean Luc Laabir, Mohamed Mar Drugs Article Vulcanodinium rugosum, a recently described dinoflagellate species producing a potent neurotoxin (pinnatoxin G), has been identified in French Mediterranean lagoons and was responsible for recurrent episodes of shellfish toxicity detected by mouse bioassay. Until now, the biology and physiology of V. rugosum have not been fully investigated. We studied the growth characteristics and toxicity of a V. rugosum strain (IFR-VRU-01), isolated in the Ingril lagoon in June 2009 (North-Western French Mediterranean Sea). It was cultivated in Enriched Natural Sea Water (ENSW) with organic (urea) and inorganic (ammonium and nitrate) nitrogen, at a temperature of 25 °C and irradiance of 100 μmol/m(2)·s(−1). Results showed that ammonium was assimilated by cells more rapidly than nitrate and urea. V. rugosum is thus an osmotrophic species using urea. Consequently, this nitrogen form could contribute to the growth of this dinoflagellate species in the natural environment. There was no significant difference (Anova, p = 0.856) between the growth rate of V. rugosum cultivated with ammonium (0.28 ± 0.11 day(−1)), urea (0.26 ± 0.08 day(−1)) and nitrate (0.24 ± 0.01 day(−1)). However, the production of chlorophyll a and pinnatoxin G was significantly lower with urea as a nitrogen source (Anova, p < 0.027), suggesting that nutritional conditions prevailing at the moment of the bloom could determine the cellular toxicity of V. rugosum and therefore the toxicity measured in contaminated mollusks. The relatively low growth rate (≤0.28 day(−1)) and the capacity of this species to continuously produce temporary cysts could explain why cell densities of this species in the water column are typically low (≤20,000 cells/L). MDPI 2015-09-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4584345/ /pubmed/26404325 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md13095642 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Abadie, Eric
Kaci, Lamia
Berteaux, Tom
Hess, Philipp
Sechet, Véronique
Masseret, Estelle
Rolland, Jean Luc
Laabir, Mohamed
Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title_full Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title_fullStr Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title_short Effect of Nitrate, Ammonium and Urea on Growth and Pinnatoxin G Production of Vulcanodinium rugosum
title_sort effect of nitrate, ammonium and urea on growth and pinnatoxin g production of vulcanodinium rugosum
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4584345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26404325
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md13095642
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