26 research outputs found
New Approach Using the Real-Time PCR Method for Estimation of the Toxic Marine Dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata in Marine Environment
Background: We describe the development and validation of a new quantitative real time PCR (qrt-PCR) method for the
enumeration of the toxic benthic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata in marine environment. The benthic Ostreopsis sp. has a
world-wide distribution and is associated during high biomass proliferation with the production of potent palytoxin-like
compounds affecting human health and environment. Species-specific identification, which is relevant for the complex of
different toxins production, by traditional methods of microscopy is difficult due to the high morphological variability, and
thus different morphotypes can be easily misinterpreted.
Methodology/Findings: The method is based on the SYBR I Green real-time PCR technology and combines the use of a
plasmid standard curve with a ‘‘gold standard’’ created with pooled crude extracts from environmental samples collected
during a bloom event of Ostreopsis cf. ovata in the Mediterranean Sea. Based on their similar PCR efficiencies (95% and 98%,
respectively), the exact rDNA copy number per cell was obtained in cultured and environmental samples. Cell lysates were
used as the templates to obtain total recovery of DNA. The analytical sensitivity of the PCR was set at two rDNA copy
number and 8.061024 cell per reaction for plasmid and gold standards, respectively; the sensitivity of the assay was of cells
g21 fw or 121 in macrophyte and seawater samples, respectively. The reproducibility was determined on the total linear
quantification range of both curves confirming the accuracy of the technical set-up in the complete ranges of quantification
over time.
Conclusions/Significance: We developed a qrt-PCR assay specific, robust and high sample throughput for the absolute
quantification of the toxic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata in the environmental samples. This molecular approach may be
considered alternative to traditional microscopy and applied for the monitoring of benthic toxic microalgal species in the
marine ecosystems
Phylogenetic evidence for the early evolution of microcystin synthesis
Cyanobacteria are a prolific source of secondary metabolites, including compounds with toxic and enzyme-inhibiting activities. Microcystins and nodularins are the end products of a secondary metabolic pathway comprised of mixed polyketide synthases and nonribosomal peptide synthetases. Both peptides are potent natural toxins produced by distantly related genera of cyanobacteria. Horizontal gene transfer is thought to play a role in the sporadic distribution of microcystin producers among cyanobacteria. Our phylogenetic analyses indicate a coevolution of housekeeping genes and microcystin synthetase genes for the entire evolutionary history of the toxin. Hence they do not corroborate horizontal transfer of genes for microcystin biosynthesis between the genera. The sporadic distribution of microcystin synthetase genes in modern cyanobacteria suggests that the ability to produce the toxin has been lost repeatedly in the more derived lineages of cyanobacteria. The data we present here strongly suggest that the genes encoding nodularin synthetase are recently derived from those encoding microcystin synthetase