AIMS home
About AIMS
Research
Facilities
News
Search
Site map
Site index
Topics index
|

Microcystins
and nodularins
These toxins
are cyclic peptides with microcystins comprising seven amino acids
while nodularins contain only five amino acids. A microcystin is
depicted in the figure below. These toxins mediate their toxicity by
inhibiting liver function. The amino acid composition of the
individual microcystins or nodularins may vary the novel hydrophobic
amino acid, 3-amino-9-methoxy-10-phenyl-2,6,8 trimethyl deca,4,6
dienoic acid (ADDA) is essential to its pharmacological activity.
Like okadaic acid, which causes diarrhetic shellfish poisoning,
microcystins and nodularins are potent inhibitors of the
serine/threonine protein phosphatases, binding to the same site upon
the enzymes as okadaic acid and may therefore act as tumour
promoters.

Figure
6 Microcystis
Where
these toxins are found
In
freshwater, the blue green algae, Anabaena, Nodularia, Nostoc,
Oscillatoria and Microcystis from which the microcystins derive
their name. Over fifty microcystin analogues are known. Nodularin is
found in the blue-green alga Nodulara spumigena which usually occurs
in brackish waters such as that found in estuaries. There have been
reports of microcystins in the marine shellfish, namely the blue
mussel Mytilus edulis, although the source of the toxin was not
identified. Of more prominent concern is the potential for these
toxins to contaminate drinking water, a situation that may impact
not only humans but also agricultural livestock and wildlife. It has
been claimed by some that toxins from cyanobacteria contaminated
water in a kidney dialysis clinic in Brazil and contributed to human
deaths. Salmon, striped bass and shrimp have been found to
harbour microcystins, with the fish usually dying from acute liver
failure, the so-called net pen liver disease, while the toxins may
be accumulated in the shrimp's tissues.
How
the toxins work
As mentioned
above, these toxins inhibit serine/threonine protein phosphatases
enzymes responsible for removing phosphate groups from other
proteins, the process of dephosphorylation, which acts as a switch
for the activity of the target of these phosphatases. The liver is
particularly susceptible to these toxins because unlike many other
cell types, these peptides are able to penetrate the liver cells and
are specifically taken up through the bile acid transport pathway.
These toxins damage the liver by affecting the maintenance by these
phosphatases of the cytoskeleton, which is comprised of a network of
protein filaments. In a healthy cell, although these protein
filaments shrink, grow, and dissociate and associate on an ongoing
basis, the general size of the cytoskeleton stays constant.
Microcystins and nodularins cause the cytoskeleton to collapse then
because the balance of phosphate groups on the cytoskeletal proteins
is disrupted, and the liver cells implode. The liver cells, along
with the capillary cells, pull apart releasing blood into the liver.
Blood pooling occurs in the liver, and death results.
Of a more
long term concern is that microcystins and nodularins are liver
tumour promoters in test animals. Epidemiology suggests that there
may be a positive correlation between levels of microcystin in fresh
water supplies in certain areas of China and the number of human
liver cancer cases.
Further
Reading
Carmichael
WW (1994) The toxins of cyanobacteria. Sci Am 270, 78-86.
Chen DZX,
Boland MP, Smillie MA, Klix H, Ptak C, Andersen RJ & Holmes CF
(1993) Identification of protein phosphatase inhibitors of the
microcystin class in the marine environment. Toxicon 31, 1407-1414.
Jochimson
EM, Carmichael WW, An JS, Cardo DM, Cookson ST, Holmes CEM, Autines
MBD, Demelo DA, Lyra TM, Barreto VST, Azevedo SMFO & Jarvis
WR(1998) Liver failure and death after exposure to microcystins at a
hemodialysis center in Brazil. NE. J Med 338, 873-878.
MacKintosh
C, Beattie KA, Klumpp S, Cohen P & Codd GA (1990) Cyanobacterial
microcystin-LR is a potent and specific inhibitor of protein
phosphatases 1 and 2A from both mammals and higher plants. FEBS Lett
264, 187-1920.
Nishiwaki-Matsushima
R, Nishiwaki S, Ohta T, Yoshizawa S, Suganuma M, Harada K, Watanabe
MF & Fujiki H (1991) Structure-function relationships of
microcystins, liver tumor promoters, in interaction with protein
phosphatase. Jpn J Cancer Res 82, 993-996.
Williams
DE, Dawe SC, Kent ML, Andersen RJ, Craig M & Holmes CFB (1997)
Bioaccumulation and clearance of microcystins from salt water
mussels, Mytilus edulis, and in vivo evidence for covalently bound
microcystins in mussel tissues. Toxicon 35:1617-1625.
e-mail: web@aims.gov.au
Page last updated -
December 18, 2008
©2000-2005 Australian Research Network for Algal Toxins
URL http://www.aims.gov.au/arnat
[
About AIMS ] [
AIMS
research ] [
AIMS facilities
] [ AIMS news
] [ AIMS search
]
[ AIMS publications ] [
Doing business with AIMS
] [ What's new
]
[ Site index ] [
Navigating
this site ] [
Privacy
policy ] [
Links
]
|