Publication | Open Access
Changes in toxin content, biomass and pigments of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum during nitrogen refeeding and growth into nitrogen or phosphorus stress
117
Citations
7
References
1994
Year
Two stralns of the paralytic shellfish tox~n (PST) producing dinoflagellate Alexandrium lninutum Halim (highly toxic ALlV and weakly toxic AL2V) were grown in batch culture with either nitrate or phosphate as the limiting nutrient. In comparison with cells of the strain ALlV, cells of AL2V grew at a similar C-specific rate, had a higher C/N ratio, and lower ratios of chl a/chl c2 and chl a/peridinin. Neither chlorophylls nor carotenoids could be used to estimate C-biomass, N-biomass or toxin content for this organism. The toxin profile for both strains was dominated (up to 95 %) by the gonyautoxin GTX4, with smaller proportions of GTX1. GTX2 and GTX3. The rate of toxin synthesis for both strains was greatest 1 to 2 d after the N-refeeding of N-deprived cells, with the net rate of toxin synthesis exceeding that of C-biomass and cell division by a factor of up to 4. Toxin synthesis was not enhanced by short-term P-stress. N-stress alone led to a decrease in toxin cell-', but P-stress followed by N-stress did not result in such a decline, implicating phosphorus in the regulation of toxin metabolism. Although arginine is a major precursor for PST synthesis, taurine, glycine, glutamine, and cell N showed similar relations to that observed for arginine with respect to toxin content. Furthermore, the mole ratio of arginine/toxin could vary by a factor of up to 5 between ALlV and AL2V at peak values of toxin cell-', and by more than 5 within a strain when growing under different conditions. These observations suggest that the relationship between free arginine content and toxin content is complex. No explanation for the higher toxin content of A L l V IS apparent, except that ALlV has a higher N-content per cell and this may be conducive to a higher rate of synthesis of the N-rich toxins.
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