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Australian journal of biological sciences 1978-Jun

Isolation, characterization and pathology of the toxin from a Microcystis aeruginosa (= Anacystis cyanea) bloom.

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T C Elleman
I R Falconer
A R Jackson
M T Runnegar

Keywords

Abstract

The nature of the toxicity of a bloom of blue-green alga, M. aeruginosa (= Anacystis cyanea), that occurred in a man-made lake was investigated. Crude algal bloom extracts were toxic to laboratory mice when injected intraperitoneally. The lethal dose (LD100) of these extracts was 15-30 mg of lyophilized algal bloom per kilogram body weight. The toxin was purified by a procedure that included ammonium sulphate fractionation, solvent extraction, acid precipitation, Sephadex G25 and DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, and high-voltage electrophoresis at pH 6.5. The preparation gave a single spot on high-voltage electrophoresis at pH 9.0, had no free amino group, and was characterized by a simple amino acid composition of equimolar quantities of L-methionine, L-tyrosine, D-alanine, D-glutamic acid, erythro beta-methyl aspartic acid and methylamine. The LD50 for the purified toxin was estimated to be 0.056 mg/kg of mice, and the approximate LD100 is 0.070 mg/kg, based on the total material found from amino acid analysis. Parenteral administration of the purified toxin to mice produced extensive liver lobular haemorrhage and death within 1-3 h. Repeated inoculation of sublethal doses daily over some weeks produced progressive hepatocyte degeneration and necrosis and the development of fine hepatic fibrosis.

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