Toxins (Dec 2011)

Investigations into the Toxicology of Spirolides, a Group of Marine Phycotoxins

  • Rex Munday,
  • Shawna L. MacKinnon,
  • H. Stephen Ewart,
  • Sandra A. Sperker,
  • Pamela Gallant,
  • Nancy Lewis,
  • Patricia LeBlanc,
  • Michael A. Quilliam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins4010001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Spirolides are marine phycotoxins produced by the dinoflagellates Alexandrium ostenfeldii and A. peruvianum. Here we report that 13-desmethyl spirolide C shows little cytotoxicity when incubated with various cultured mammalian cell lines. When administered to mice by intraperitoneal (ip) injection, however, this substance was highly toxic, with an LD50 value of 6.9 µg/kg body weight (BW), showing that such in vitro cytotoxicity tests are not appropriate for predicting the in vivo toxicity of this toxin. Four other spirolides, A, B, C, and 20-methyl spirolide G, were also toxic to mice by ip injection, with LD50 values of 37, 99, 8.0 and 8.0 µg/kg BW respectively. However, the acute toxicities of these compounds were lower by at least an order of magnitude when administration by gavage and their toxic effects were further diminished when administered with food. These results have implications for future studies of the toxicology of these marine toxins and the risk assessment of human exposure.

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