- 1Departamento de Biotecnología Marina, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, Ensenada, Mexico
- 2Departamento de Oceanografía Biológica, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, Ensenada, Mexico
- 3Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Weymouth, United Kingdom
In January 2015, a harmful algae bloom (HAB) of the dinoflagellate Gymnodinium catenatum occurred in the Northern Gulf of California (NGC). This species produces paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs), a group of potent neurotoxins. The harvesting and commercialization of geoduck Panopea globosa are important economic activities in this region and were prohibited for several months due to the accumulation of PSTs in clam tissues. We analyzed PSTs concentrations in P. globosa collected on a weekly basis during 2015 near San Felipe, Baja California. The aim of the study was to evaluate the transformation and depuration characteristics of PSTs in different geoduck tissues. The PST content was evaluated in the visceral mass and in the siphon by high-performance liquid chromatography with post-column oxidation (HPLC-PCOX). Additionally, 10 selected samples were analyzed by hydrophilic interaction chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HILIC-MS/MS). Toxicity in all siphon samples was lower than the regulatory limit (RL) for PSTs of 800 μg STX eq kg-1. In contrast, the maximum toxicity of 16,740 μg STX eq kg-1 detected in the visceral mass exceeded 21 times the RL and it took 210 days to reach values below 800 μg STX eq kg-1. Therefore, P. globosa can be considered a slow detoxifier bivalve with a depuration rate of 4.3% day-1 (calculated by an exponential decay model; R2 = 0.80). The N-sulfocarbamoyl toxins C1 and 2 were the most abundant analogs in the siphon and viscera samples collected close to the HAB occurrence. The concentration of these analogs decreased and GTX5 and more toxic analogs such as dcGTX2 and dcSTX were detected. M-type analogs were detected by HILIC-MS/MS and represented up to 75% of total PSTs in some samples. M-type analogs contributed to 48% of toxicity estimated in the sample. We report for the first time the depuration rate, PSTs profile, and its change over time in P. globlosa. This information is essential to characterize the metabolism of toxins in this economically important bivalve but also to develop management plans for fisheries if the organism is going to be recurrently exposed to PSTs producing blooms, as seems the case for the NGC.
Introduction
Paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) are a group of at least 50 water-soluble neurotoxic alkaloids analogs to saxitoxin (Wiese et al., 2010). Dinoflagellates of the genera Gymnodinium, Alexandrium, and Pyrodinium are the primary producers of PSTs in marine environments (Jaime et al., 2007). PSTs attach reversibly to the voltage-dependent sodium channel and block the pores of the channels. This prevents the transmission of the nerve impulses resulting in neuromuscular paralysis (Cestèle and Catterall, 2000; Bricelj et al., 2005). PSTs vary in their potency or biological activity: the carbamate (saxitoxin STX, neosaxitoxin NEO, and gonyautoxins GTX1–4) are the most potent toxins since they have a higher affinity to sodium channels. N-sulfocarbamoyl toxins (B1 and 2 and C1–4) are the least potent ones, while decarbamoyl toxins (dcGTX1–4, dcSTX, and dcNEO) exhibit intermediate specific toxicities (Bricelj and Shumway, 1998). Figure 1 shows the structures of the primary toxin analogs and are grouped according to the molecular substitutions.
FIGURE 1. Structure of the paralytic shellfish primary toxin analogs, grouped according to the molecular substitutions.
Bivalves, crustaceans, some gastropods, and planktivorous fishes that feed on PSTs producing organisms can accumulate these toxins in their tissues and incorporate them into the food chain. Consumption of contaminated shellfish with PSTs, mainly bivalves, can lead to paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) in humans. This syndrome can, at sufficient high toxin concentrations, cause death from cardio respiratory arrest (Botana, 2000). In Mexico, PSP is the most important toxic syndrome related to harmful algae blooms (HABs) of marine species and the only one associated with human fatalities (Lewitus et al., 2012). In Mexico, PSP has affected at least 460 individuals with 32 recognized fatalities (Band-Schmidt et al., 2010; Bustillos-Guzmán et al., 2016; Santiago-Morales, 2016). The first recognized PSP outbreak occurred in 1979 in the coast of Sonora to Jalisco (Figure 2) and was associated with a bloom of Gymnodinium catenatum (Mee et al., 1986). The intoxication of 19 people occurred, including three deaths, as well as an extensive fish die-off (De la Garza, 1983; Mee et al., 1986). Other outbreaks have been documented along the Mexican Pacific coast (Bustillos-Guzmán et al., 2016). The bivalves responsible for the intoxications were not identified in the majority of the outbreaks. However, PSTs have been detected in shellfish in most of these events. In the 1979 outbreak, the rocky oyster Crassostrea iridiscens accumulated 10,700–17,200 μg STX eq kg-1 and the clam Donax sp. accumulated 76,400 μg STX eq kg-1 (Mee et al., 1986). In November 1989, three people died and 99 others became intoxicated in the Gulf of Tehuantepec region (Oaxaca coast, Mexican tropical Pacific, Figure 2) and the accumulation of 8,110 μg STX eq kg-1 in oyster was documented (Saldate-Castañeda et al., 1991). Also along the Oaxaca coast, three people died and 17 were intoxicated between August 2001 and February 2002. Associated with this outbreak, up to 14,560 μg STX eq kg-1 were detected in mussels (Ramírez-Camarena et al., 2004; Band-Schmidt et al., 2010; Santiago-Morales, 2016).
FIGURE 2. Gulf of California and Mexican Tropical Pacific where outbreaks of paralytic shellfish toxins have occurred. The northern part of the Gulf of California and the location of Atenea en el Mar company federal approved area for harvesting of Panopea globosa in San Felipe, BC, are presented in the inset of the map.
In general, the species responsible for the accumulation of the PSTs during the outbreaks are G. catenatum in the northern coasts of the Mexican Pacific Ocean and Pyrodinium bahamense var. compressum in the south (Lewitus et al., 2012; Bustillos-Guzmán et al., 2016; Santiago-Morales, 2016). Most HABs of these species occur between February and May when the water temperature is between 17–25°C (Manrique and Molina, 1997; Gárate-Lizárraga et al., 2004, 2006; Lewitus et al., 2012). In January 2015, an intense and extensive HAB of G. catenatum occurred in the north of the Gulf of California (GC; Figure 2). This HAB affected the economy, the ecology, and public health of the region. Most notably, the HAB was associated with seabirds and marine mammal die-offs (Garcia-Mendoza et al., in preparation), also resulting in the intoxication of at least five people at Los Angeles Bay after the ingestion of wild bivalves (Comisión Federal para la Protección contra Riesgos Sanitarios, 2015). As a direct consequence of this bloom, the extraction and commercialization of some shellfish species was prohibited almost all year. Harvesting of Panopea globosa was particularly affected.
Panopea globosa is an endemic geoduck clam from the northwest coast of Mexico. Its distribution extends from the upper GC to Magdalena Bay on the Pacific side of the Baja California peninsula (Aragón-Noriega et al., 2012). Geoducks clams are large infaunal bivalves, their shells can be larger than 25 cm, the siphon may exceed 1 m in length and can reach 2 kg of weight (Goodwin and Pease, 1987). These organisms live buried in the sediment ranging from the intertidal zone to a depth of 110 m (Bureau et al., 2002). P. globosa is one of the most important economic resources of the GC. San Felipe is the main port of arrival for these bivalves with a mean production of 848 t year-1 from 2005 to 2010 that represent approximately 10 million USD per year (Secretaría de Pesca de Baja California, 2016). The market for Mexican geoducks is the United States and Asian countries which demands live adult organisms (Aragón-Noriega et al., 2012). The sanitary ban implemented in 2015 significantly affected the industry in the Northern Gulf of California (NGC). The extraction of the clams was prohibited for 5 consecutive months and after June 2015, closures occurred intermittently for another 5 months due to the detection of PSTs concentrations in visceral mass above the regulatory limit (RL) of 800 μg STX eq kg-1 (Comisión Federal para la Protección contra Riesgos Sanitarios, 2015).
Accumulation of PSTs in geoduck species has been only characterized in Panopea generosa (=Panopea abrupta). The intra- and inter-population toxin variability was described in organisms from two localities of the Washington coast (Curtis et al., 2000). PSTs concentrations were highly variable among locations and between the sampling depths of the organisms. Most important, the amount of toxins accumulated in viscera was much higher than in the siphon and its concentration was above the RL for the entire 5 months of the study (Curtis et al., 2000). There was no information about the presence of the phytoplankton organism producing the PSTs. However, the data indicated that P. generosa is a slow depurating organism, with PSTs being retained in the tissues for long periods of time. There is no information about the PSTs metabolism in P. globosa. Therefore, the aim of this present study was to describe the transformation and depuration of PSTs in viscera and the siphon of the geoduck P. globosa. This information is important for the characterizations of PSTs metabolic processes in bivalves and it is necessary for the management of this important regional fishery in case of HABs producing PSTs.
Materials and Methods
Study Area and Sample Collection
The GC, located in the northwest of Mexico, is a narrow shelf sea of approximately 1,100 km length and 150 km width (Gutiérrez et al., 2004). The GC is a productive semienclosed sea that supports several industrial and small-scale fisheries (Cudney-Bueno et al., 2009). The GC is situated between the Baja California Peninsula (West) and the Sonora and Sinaloa coasts (East). The Northern border is limited by the Colorado River base level and the Southern border is delimited by an imaginary line from the tip of the Baja California Peninsula to Cabo Corrientes, Jalisco, Mexico (Espinosa-Carreón and Valdéz-Olguín, 2007). The Northern Gulf goes from Colorado River to the south of Tiburon Island (Figure 2).
There are approximately 20 Panopea harvesting areas in the NGC. The laboratory FICOTOX of Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, Baja California (CICESE) has been monitoring the phytoplankton community intermittently since 2011 in surface water samples collected from a harvesting area located south from San Felipe, Baja California, Mexico (30°39′30′′–30°50′00′′ N and 114°34′00′′–114°41′15′′ W; Figure 2). This area is a federal concession to the company Atenea en el Mar for geoduck extraction. After the detection of the bloom, water samples were collected every week from January to June of 2015. Also, geoduck clams were collected every week in this area after the detection of the bloom.
The phytoplankton community was evaluated in water samples collected at the surface and from 10 m depth vertical net hauls; 250 mL of water were placed in dark plastic bottles (Nalgene type) and fixed with 1–2 mL of a concentrated lugol-acetate solution. This solution is recommended for evaluation of the phytoplankton community with the Utermöhl technique (Sournia, 1978). Lugol-acetate increases the settling velocity of microalgae, and can be used for the majority of phytoplankton species without damaging the cells. Also, has low toxicity to humans compared with other fixatives (Andersen and Throndsen, 2004). The Utermöhl technique (Sournia, 1978) was used to identify and to evaluate phytoplankton cell abundance; 10–25 mL of the sample were sedimented for at least 24 h and the complete surface of the sedimentation chamber was analyzed with a LEICA DMI3000B (Leica Microsystems, Germany) inverted microscope. The abundance of G. catenatum (in cells L-1) was calculated according to the sedimented volume. A minimum of 500 cells were counted to estimate the relative abundance of G. catenatum to total phytoplankton cells (in %) present in samples collected from net hauls.
Geoduck clams collected by scuba diving at 12–20 m depth were maintained in cooler boxes and kept at 12–16°C until delivery to the laboratory. Samples were transported to the laboratory FICOTOX in less than 24 h after the collection. Associated with internal paperwork problems of the company some organisms could not be delivered to the laboratory after field sampling. Organisms collected on June 7 and 29, July 2 and 25, and August 7 and 8 were kept alive in the company tanks without food at 18°C before delivering the samples to the laboratory. These samples arrived at the laboratory no more than 8 days after collection from the field.
Once in the laboratory, organisms were dissected. The toxin content was evaluated both in the visceral mass that contains all the geoduck organs and in the siphon, the muscular part of the organism. To obtain a representative sample and according to recommendations of the national sanitary regulation for PSTs monitoring in geoduck (Secretaría de Salud, 2016), each sample consisted of three individuals. The tissues of the three dissected organisms were pooled together, homogenized in a blender and kept frozen at -20°C until its analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography with post-column oxidation (HPLC-PCOX) according to Van de Riet et al. (2011). To extract the toxins, 5 g of each tissue homogenate (consisting of three siphons or three visceral masses) were mixed with 5 mL of 0.1 M HCl and boiled for 5 min. After cooling to room temperature, samples were centrifuged at 3,000 g for 10 min and an aliquot of 500 μL of the supernatant was recovered and deproteinized with 35 μL of trichloroacetic acid (TCA) 30% solution. The pH was adjusted to 3 before and after the boiling step with 5 M NaOH or 5 M HCl. The pH was also adjusted after the addition of the TCA with 25 μL of 0.1 M NaOH. The aliquot was subsequently filtered through a 45 μm pore size nylon membrane filter before injection onto the HPLC-PCOX system.
Quantification of PSTs by HPLC-PCOX
HPLC-PCOX was conducted as described by Van de Riet et al. (2011). The analysis was performed using an Agilent Technologies 1100 model HPLC (Agilent, United States) calibrated with eight certified reference standards obtained from the Institute of Biotoxin Metrology, National Research Council Canada (NRC, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada). For C toxins (C1 and 2) 5 μL of each sample was injected onto an Agilent Zorbax SB-C8 (250 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 μm) HPLC column. For GTX toxins (GTX1 and 4, GTX2 and 3, dcGTX2 and 3, GTX5) and STX toxins (NeoSTX, STX, dcSTX) 10 μL of each sample were injected onto an Agilent Zorbax Bonus-RP (150 mm × 4.6 mm, 3.5 μm) column. After the chromatographic separation, samples were oxidized online in a Vector PCX derivatization instrument (Pickering Labs Inc., United States) and detected by fluorescence. Excitation was at 330 nm and emission detection at 395 nm. When the concentration of PSTs in samples was higher than the calibration curve concentration range, extracts were diluted with a 0.1 M HCl (pH 3) solution. The dilution factor was considered in the calculation of PSTs concentration.
Total toxicity of the sample was calculated by the multiplication of the concentration of each toxin, the molecular weight of STX diHCl and the toxicity equivalent factor (TEF) of each analog according to Oshima (1995; Table 1).
TABLE 1. Toxin equivalent factors (TEFs; Oshima, 1995) applied for quantitation and semiquantitation of PST analogs.
Quantification of PSTs by HILIC-MS/MS
Ten selected samples collected at different dates were also analyzed by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HILIC-MS/MS). After the centrifugation step, the sample was lyophilized and sent for analysis to the Centre for Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Science (Cefas). Here, the samples were subjected to semiautomated solid phase (SPE) clean-up using Supelclean ENVI-Carb 250 mg 3 mL-1 SPE cartridges (Sigma–Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, United States). Sample extracts were eluted and collected through the addition of 2 mL 20% acetonitrile (MeCN) + 0.25% acetic acid at 3 mL min-1. SPE eluents were vortex-mixed prior to dilution of 100 μL aliquots in 700 μL Verex polypropylene autosampler vials (Phenomenex, Manchester, United Kingdom) with 300 μL MeCN.
HILIC-MS/MS was conducted according to Boundy et al. (2015) using a 1.7 μm, 2.1 mm × 150 mm Waters (Manchester, United Kingdom) Acquity BEH Amide UPLC column in conjunction with a Waters VanGuard BEH Amide guard cartridge; 2 μL were injected into a Waters Acquity UPLC I-Class coupled to a Waters Xevo TQ-S tandem quadrupole mass spectrometer (MS/MS). The HILIC-MS/MS method was calibrated with nine STX analogs with certified reference standards obtained from NRC (C1 and 2, dcGTX2 and 3, GTX2 and 3, GTX1 and 4, GTX5, dcSTX, dcNEO, NEO, STX) plus four reference materials (C3 and 4, GTX6, doSTX, and tetrodotoxin TTX) from Cawthron Natural Compounds (CNC, New Zealand) and CIFGA laboratories (Lugo, Spain). Levels of toxins with no reference standards, such as dcGTX1 and 4 and M-toxins, were semiquantified using the response factor of the nearest structural analog with a certified standard and applying a relative response factor (RRF; Boundy et al., 2015; (1.8 for dcGTX1, 1.93 for dcGTX4, and 1 for M toxins; Turner et al., 2015). In the absence of relative toxicity data for M-toxins, TEFs were taken from structurally similar PSTs analogs (Table 1).
Data Analysis
SigmaPlot 11.0 (Systat Software Inc.) was used to fit an exponential decay function to the change of PSTs in time. Also, the software was used to fit a linear model and an exponential rise to a maximal regression model to the PSTs present in the siphon in relation to the concentration of these toxin in the visceral mass.
Results
Gymnodinium catenatum Abundance
The phytoplankton community has been monitored by the laboratory FICOTOX intermittently from 2011 in surface water samples collected every two weeks or every month in the P. globosa extraction area located south from San Felipe. In general, G. catenatum has been present from December to April and surface abundances has been no higher than 10 × 103 cells L-1 before 2015 (data not shown). On January 14, 2015, the abundance of this dinoflagellate reached 152 × 103 cells L-1 (Figure 3A). From this date, surface and vertical net tow water samples were analyzed on a weekly basis. One week after, the maximum abundance was detected the presence of G. catenatum decreased to 9.3 × 103 cells L-1. Detection of this species at the water surface continued in the following weeks and a second abundance peak was registered on February 24 (18.5 × 103 cells L-1). After this date, this species disappeared and was detected again in April and May at abundances lower than of 3.8 × 103 cells L-1 (Figure 3A).
FIGURE 3. Surface (A) and relative abundance (B) of Gymnodinium catenatum during 2015 in the northern region of the Gulf of California. Toxicity associated with paralytic shellfish toxins in the siphon (C) and visceral mass (D) of geoduck samples collected from January 2015 to April of 2016. Dotted line shows the fitted of exponential decay function to the data and the dashed line is the regulatory limit (RL) of 800 μg STX eq kg-1.
The abundance of G. catenatum evaluated in vertical net tow samples clearly showed the presence of the bloom in the area (Figure 3B). The relative abundance of this species (abundance of G. catenatum to total phytoplankton cells in the net sample) was 55% on January 14 and decreased in the following weeks. The relative abundance increased in February and reached a maximum abundance of 87%. G. catenatum was detected in net tow samples until March 10. This species disappeared after this date and was detected again on May 1 with a relative abundance of 62%. G. catenatum appeared in net tow samples on May 12 for the last time with relative abundance of 27% (Figure 3B).
Toxicity in the Siphon and Visceral Mass of P. globosa
The visceral mass (viscera ball) contains the gut, the digestive gland, gonads, heart, kidney, and gills. Although this part of the clams is rarely consumed, the visceral mass is the target tissue to evaluate the concentration of PSTs in geoduck clams. The muscle (siphon) is the part of the organism that is preferentially consumed. PST concentrations together with their transformation and depuration were evaluated in both tissues. Toxin concentrations were determined in 23 siphon and 40 viscera ball samples collected in 2015. Also, toxin concentrations in nine samples collected in 2017 were considered in the analysis of the relation between the siphon and viscera toxicity (see below).
Paralytic shellfish toxins were present in the siphon, although concentrations were lower than the RL of 800 μg STX eq kg-1 in all samples (Figure 3C). The highest PSTs concentration (429 μg STX eq kg-1) was detected on January 27 and decreased from this day. The lowest concentration was detected after five months (60 μg STX eq kg-1) from the quantification of the maximum PSTs accumulation (Figure 3C). Therefore, after July, no more samples of siphon were processed. An exponential decay model was fitted to the data describing the reduction in toxicity level over time. The determination coefficient (R2) was 0.82 and the calculated depurating rate of PSTs in the siphon was 2.5% of toxin loss per day (Figure 3C).
Panopea globosa accumulated PSTs mainly in the visceral mass. Maximum PSTs concentration within these tissues reached 16,740 μg STX eq kg-1 in January. This concentration represented 21 times the RL (Figure 3D). The toxicity was higher than this limit for approximately eight months. A sample with a concentration lower than 800 μg STX eq kg-1 was detected on August 25, 210 days after the detection of the maximum concentration. However, the toxicity increased again in the following weeks and fluctuated around the RL during the rest of 2015. The last sample processed for the study was collected in March 2016 and presented a PSTs concentration of 629 μg STX eq kg-1.
An exponential decay model was also fitted to the change of PSTs in viscera over time (R2 = 0.80). The maximum PSTs concentration detected on January 27 was the first data used in the analysis (Figure 3D). The calculated depuration rate was 4.3% of toxin loss per day. According to this, the PSTs concentration should have reached the RL 106 days after the maximum concentration was detected.
Paralytic shellfish toxins in the siphon were related to the concentration of these toxins in the visceral mass. This relation is shown in Figure 4. PSTs concentrations detected in viscera and siphon after another HAB that occurred in January 2107 were also considered in this analysis. On January 24 of 2017, G. catenatum surface abundance reached 283 × 103 cells L-1 in the P. globosa extraction area. The relative abundance of G. catenatum in net tow samples was 87% on this date.
FIGURE 4. Relation between calculated toxicity of the siphon and visceral mass in geoduck samples collected during 2015 (circles) and 2017 (squares). The filled square shows the highest paralytic shellfish toxin concentration detected in viscera in 2017. This point was omitted (outlier) when a linear regression analysis was applied (R2 = 0.72, dashed line; see text). An exponential rise to a maximal function was used for the regression analysis considering all data (R2 = 0.78, solid line).
After the 2017 HAB, concentrations above 800 μg STX eq kg-1 were detected in three siphon samples (Figure 4). An exponential rise to a maximal value function explains 78% (R2 = 0.78) of the variance between PSTs present in the siphon in relation to the presence of these toxin in the viscera. However, a high PSTs concentration detected in the siphon (1,063 μg STX eq kg-1) clearly influenced the relation and increased R2 when the exponential function is considered. This concentration in the siphon was detected when viscera presented 49,166 μg STX eq kg-1. Regression analysis considering different models (linear, exponential, polynomial) were performed without considering these high concentrations of PSTs (outlier). PSTs in the siphon were linearly related (best fit) to the concentration detected in viscera below 20,000 μg STX eq kg-1 (R2 = 0.72; Figure 4). According to this model, toxicity in viscera was 23.8 times higher than the one detected in the siphon. Importantly, the toxicity in the siphon will exceed the RL when toxicity in visceral mass reaches 18,424 μg STX eq kg-1.
Paralytic Shellfish Toxins in the Siphon and Visceral Mass of P. globosa
To characterize the accumulation and biotransformation process of PSTs, it is essential to evaluate the analogs present in the samples. Therefore, we evaluated the concentrations of 12 PSTs analogs in both the siphon and visceral mass samples (Figure 5). Both tissues contained the major analogs C1 and 2, GTX2 and 3, GTX5, dcGTX2 and 3, and dcSTX. We detected trace amounts of GTX4, Neo, and STX in some viscera samples, while STX and Neo were not detected in any of the siphon samples.
FIGURE 5. Paralytic toxins in the siphon (A,C,E) and in the visceral mass (B,D,F) of geoduck samples collected from January 2015 to April of 2016. The paralytic toxins molar concentration (nmol g-1) is presented in A and B. The molar contribution (in %, C,D) and toxicity contribution (in %, E,F) of different paralytic toxins analogs detected during the sampling period is also shown. The toxicity of each analog was calculated according to the toxin equivalent factors shown in Table 1.
The variation in the molar concentration of each toxin and its contribution to total toxicity in the siphon and viscera during the monitoring period is shown in Figure 5. In the siphon, the molar content was 16 nmol g-1 in February and decreased to 1 nmol g-1 in June (Figure 5A). C1 and 2 were the prevalent toxins in all the samples throughout the monitoring period. These analogs represented 95% of the total PSTs content in the siphon samples during February and decreased to 28% at the end of the sampling period (Figure 5C). The reduction of C1 and 2 was accompanied with an increase of GTX5, dcGTX2, and dcSTX to a maximum combined relative concentration of 60% (0.6 nmol g-1; Figure 5C). The contribution to total toxicity in terms of STX equivalents of each analog is shown in Figure 5E. Type C toxins contributed up to 73% to the toxicity in January. With the reduction of C1and2 in the siphon, a significant increase of dcSTX contribution to total toxicity was detected at the end of the sampling period (68% in June, Figure 5E).
Toxin content in the visceral mass was 457 nmol g-1 in January 2015 and decreased to 3.6 nmol g-1 in February 2016 (Figure 5B). Similar to the siphon samples, C1 and 2 were the dominant analogs (Figure 5D) in February 2015 since they represented 90% of the molar content (384 nmol g-1). In contrast with the siphon, there was a sharp reduction of the concentration of these toxins with time in viscera (Figure 5D). However, an increase of C toxins with respect to previous concentrations was detected two times in May. PSTs molar concentration of C toxins increased from 18% on April 24 to 33% on May 1 and from 22% on May 12 to 44% on May 19 (Figure 5D). The reduction of C toxins was accompanied with the appearance of GTX5 and the more potent toxins, dcSTX and dcGTX2 (Figure 5F). After February, dcSTX was the analog that contributed the most to total toxicity. The highest dcSTX concentration (338 nmol g-1) was detected on May 12 and represented 63% of the 2,610 μg STX eq kg-1 calculated on this date. At the end of the monitoring period, low STX concentrations were detected (maximum concentration of 1.2 nmol g-1) that represented the 9% of the toxicity calculated in March 2016 (50 μg STX eq kg-1).
There is a limitation on the detection and quantification of PSTs analogs by HPLC-PCOX. The detection of PSTs by this method was only directed to the commercially toxin certified reference materials available when the method was developed. Therefore, to evaluate the presence of other analogs, 10 selected viscera samples were also analyzed by HILIC-MS/MS. This methodology allowed the detection of 12 other analogs not detected by HPLC-PCOX, including type M toxins. The five M analogs described so far were all detected in the tissue samples. M5 was the most abundant M-toxin, followed by M1 and M3. M-toxins represented between 30% (230 nmol g-1, January 20) and 75% (28 nmol g-1, June 29) of total PSTs detected by HILIC-MS/MS (Table 2). There was not a clear pattern in time of the contribution of M-toxins to total PSTs. Considering the TEFs shown in Table 1, the concentration of these toxins represented 9,718 μg STXeq kg-1 on January 20 (33% of total toxicity) and 1,838 μg STXeq kg-1 on June 29 (48% of total toxicity, Table 2).
TABLE 2. Contribution of M-toxins to molar concentration (nmol g-1) of PST and total toxicity (μg STXeq kg-1) calculated by HILIC-MS/MS analysis in geoduck visceral mass samples.
Discussion
Here, we report PSTs profiles in the viscera and the siphon tissues of P. globosa. This is the first characterization of the transformation and depuration of different analogs in a geoduck clam. The accumulation of PSTs in P. globosa was associated with a HAB of G. catenatum that was present in the NGC during the first months of 2015. HABs of G. catenatum have been reported in different areas of the GC (Band-Schmidt et al., 2010), but they have not been registered in the NGC since there was not a continuous monitoring program in the region. Monitoring of PSTs in organisms extracted from areas located south from San Felipe initiated in 2010 and the first sanitary ban for the extraction of P. globosa was implemented in the same year. As a consequence, FICOTOX research laboratory has been monitoring the phytoplankton community in the area since 2011. We have documented that G. catenatum is a conspicuous species of the phytoplankton community from December to April with abundances lower than 10 × 103 cells L-1 (Murillo-Marínez, 2011). However, in 2015, the abundance reached 152 × 103 cells L-1 in samples collected at the surface of the water column. The presence of G. catenatum was related to maximum toxicity of 16,740 μg STXeq kg-1 (27 the RL) in viscera of P. globosa. In 2017, another bloom was registered in the region and maximum registered abundance of the dinoflagellate (283 × 103 cells L-1 in surface water samples) and associated accumulation of PSTs (49,166 μg STX eq kg-1 in viscera samples) in P. globosa increased importantly.
Although the relationship between the two variables is complex, the abundance of G. catenatum seems not particularly high when considering the PSTs concentrations and total sample toxicity quantified in the clams. Higher abundances of this species have been reported during HABs in other regions. In the GC, for example, G. catenatum blooms have been associated with wild and cultured animals die-offs, economical loses (Núñez-Vázquez et al., 2011) and caused human intoxications and fatalities (Morey-Gaines, 1982; De la Garza, 1983; Mee et al., 1985; Band-Schmidt et al., 2010). Abundances registered during these HABs were in the order of 1 × 106 cells L-1 (Morey-Gaines, 1982; De la Garza, 1983; Mee et al., 1985; Band-Schmidt et al., 2010). G. catenatum has also been reported in high abundances in others parts of the world. In Spain, abundances of 2 × 106 cells L-1 were reported in 1986 causing the accumulation of up to 26,400 μg STX eq kg-1 in mussels (Anderson et al., 1989). In Portugal, the dinoflagellate has occurred since 1986, with blooms in autumn of 1986, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995, and annually from 2005 to 2012 (Vale et al., 2008; Silva et al., 2015) with abundances as high as 22 × 104 cells L-1 in 2007 (Rodrigues et al., 2012). Intermittent and multiannual scale blooms of G. catenatum are devastating to mussel aquaculture production in Galicia and to the harvesting of natural shellfish banks on the Galician and Portuguese coasts. Toxin levels of up to 60,000 μg STX eq. kg-1 in mussel meat were reported in 2005 and 2010 (Pazos et al., 2006; Vale et al., 2008), leading to prolonged harvesting closures lasting until the following spring (Trainer et al., 2010). G. catenatum surface abundance did not reflect the magnitude of the HAB event in the NGC since this species can be distributed subsuperficially. The high relative abundances detected in net tow samples of the NGC in this study indicate this subsurface distribution.
The high levels of toxin accumulation and the time required for toxin depuration in the clams was related to the long duration of the HAB. The presence of G. catenatum, in January, part of February and from March to May caused that PSTs in viscera remained above the RL for almost all 2015. The characterization of PSTs concentration changes in terms of STX eq is essential for regulation purposes. The calculated depuration rate of P. globosa was 4.3% of STX eq loss per day. Therefore, after the accumulation of 16,740 μg STX eq kg-1 in viscera, total PSTs should have reached the RL 106 days after this maximum level of toxicity. However, the RL was reached 104 days later than the date estimated by the exponential decay model. PSTs concentrations were found to decrease in time but there were periods when the toxicity increased compared to previous measurements (Figures 3C,D). This increase in toxicity was related to the increase in the abundance of G. catenatum in the water column that represented a continuous source of PSTs for geoduck clams. This consequently represents a bias in the calculation of the depuration rate in P. globosa. However, even with an under-estimation of the rate, it is evident that this species is a low depuration organism since it accumulates toxins for several months in their visceral tissues. Bricelj and Shumway (1998) classified bivalves that need several months to years to detoxify below the RL and present detoxification rates between 0.1 and 4% of STX eq loss per day, as a low depuration species. In contrast, a fast depurator bivalve has an elimination rate between 6 and 17% of toxin loss per day, and reach the RL between 1 and 10 weeks, depending on the amount of toxin assimilated (Bricelj and Shumway, 1998). Panopea species have low depurating physiology since P. generosa was also found to retain toxicity for long periods of time (Curtis et al., 2000). Another low depuration clam species is Saxidomus giganteus with an average of 0.7% of STX eq loss per day in the whole tissues (Quayle, 1969; Madenwald, 1985; Price et al., 1991), Spisula solidissima depurates at 1.9%, measured in whole animals (Shumway et al., 1988), Placopecten magellanicus at 0.6% when pools of digestive tissues, gills, and mantle are measured (Shumway et al., 1988), and Patinopecten yessoensis with an average of 2.6% in digestive tissues (Nishihama, 1980; Ogata et al., 1982; Tazawa et al., 1988).
C1 and C2 were the most abundant analogs in the siphon and viscera samples collected close to the HAB occurrence. These are the main analogs present in G. catenatum and represented 95% of the PSTs detected in phytoplankton samples during the bloom, dcGTX3, dcNeo, and GTX2 and 3 comprised the remaining 5%, (Bustillos-Guzmán et al., 2016; García-Mendoza et al., in preparation). Following the incorporation of toxins into the clam tissues through feeding activities, toxins transformation occurred principally in the viscera, where the low potency toxins C1 and 2 were converted into GTX5 and the more toxic analogs dcGTX2 and dcSTX. The presence of high toxic analogs and the increase in its relative contribution to the PSTs content in viscera caused that the toxicities remained above the RL for several months. Since there is a high number of analogs and different reactions involved in their transformation (Cembella et al., 1994; Oshima, 1995; Guéguen et al., 2011; Turner et al., 2012b, 2013), it is difficult to describe all the biotransformation steps and conversion rates that occurred in P. globosa after toxin bioaccumulation. However, we identified the principal biotransformation reactions in this species (Figure 6). Epimerization occurred between the epimeric pairs C1 and 2 and dcGTX2 and 3. C1 was then converted into GTX5 by desulfuration in R3 position or into dcGTX2 by desulfo-carboxylation in R4. C1 can also be transformed into dcSTX if both reactions occur in parallel. However, according to the time of appearance of PSTs analogs in P. globosa, it is more likely that formation of GTX5 is an intermediate step for the formation of dcSTX by desulfo-carboxylation in the R4 position. These biotransformation reactions explain the observation of the reduction of C1 and 2 which was accompanied with an increase in GTX5, dcGTX2, and dcSTX to a maximum combined relative concentration of 59%. Even when enzymatic conversion of PSTs analogs to decarbamoyl (dc) derivatives is uncommon among bivalves (Bricelj and Shumway, 1998) and has been only demonstrated in the Pacific clam Protothaca staminea (Sullivan et al., 1983), the surf clam Spisula solida (Turner et al., 2013) and in the Japanese clams Mactra chinensis and Peronida venulosa (Oshima, 1995), we identified in this study the production of dcGTX2 and 3 and dcSTX by N-sulfocarbamoyl toxins hydrolysis.
FIGURE 6. Diagram of assumed biotransformations that occurred in viscera of geoduck Panopea globosa contaminated with Gymnodinium catenatum paralytic shellfish toxins. The part of the molecule that is modified to become in another analog is highlighted in a square. Solid arrow: desulfo-carboxylation, dashed arrow: desulfurization, double arrow: epimerization.
The characterization of the PSTs conversion steps and conversion rates becomes more complicated if the M-toxins are considered. Five M analogs were present in P. globosa tissues and represented a significant proportion (between 30–75%) of the PSTs detected in the samples. This is the first time that M-toxins are reported in geoduck clams. These analogs were described in 2008 in blue mussels (Mytilus edulis and Mytilus trossulus) from eastern Canada during a HAB of Alexandrium tamarense (Dell’Aversano et al., 2008). M-toxins are most probably metabolites or degradation products formed in shellfish since they have not been detected in microalgae (Dell’Aversano et al., 2008). Five M-toxins analogs have been described. Vale (2010) found that M1 is the most abundant in species that retain PSTs toxins for longer periods. M1 toxin has been reported in mussels (Mytilus galloprovinciallis), cockles (Cerastoderma edule), and clams from estuarine (Ruditapes decussatus) and oceanic habitats (Donax trunculus and Ensis spp.) collected in Portugal during a HAB of G. catenatum (Vale, 2010). M1 could contribute to an important fraction of the PSTs profile (up to 70% of total GTX5) and has been proposed that it is originated from the metabolism of GTX5 (Vale, 2010). In the case of P. globosa, M5 was the most abundant M-toxin. Probably, there is a rapid transformation of some other M-toxins into M5 in this species. Metabolism and biotransformation of this type of toxins has not yet been elucidated.
The results of the present work have important implications for both regulation and management. Evaluation of the phytoplankton community in the NGC should be performed more intensively during winter to monitor the appearance of harmful species. The presence of G. catenatum should be evaluated not only in surface samples but also in water samples throughout appropriate depths within the water column, or vertical net hauls, tube integrated or hose integrated samples must be analyzed. Risk abundance indexes should also be developed to evaluate the possible accumulation of PSTs in geoduck clams above the RL.
Panopea globosa accumulated approximately 24 times more toxins in the viscera than in the siphon. Curtis et al. (2000) reported that accumulation of PSTs in viscera of P. generosa was 30 times higher than in the siphon. At the beginning of the fishery in the 1970s, PSTs were not considered by the Washington State Department of Health as a public health risk because the geoduck viscera were presumed to be discarded. However, it was later discovered that some members of a Native American tribe and of Asian immigrant communities in the United States consumed the viscera in soup (Curtis et al., 2000). Therefore, the sanitary programs of United States included the viscera as the target tissue for PSTs analyzes. This approach was adopted recently in Mexico to be in accordance with the United States regulation (Secretaría de Salud, 2016). The visceral ball is easily separated from the siphon and mantle without risk of contamination. Consequently, it is considered that consumption of the siphon is safe since muscle tissue does not accumulate high concentration of PSTs (Curtis et al., 2000). Geoduck Clam Biotoxin Monitoring Plan of Alaska (Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, 2017) considers evisceration and use of the siphon in some cases when unacceptable levels of PSTs are detected in viscera. We found that the accumulation of toxins in muscular tissue was proportional to the concentration of PSTs in the viscera. This indicates that a fix proportion of the toxins present in the viscera are translocated to the muscle. The siphon will exceed the RL when visceral mass accumulates 18,424 μg STX eq kg-1. More data with high PSTs concentrations in the siphon are needed to describe a more robust statistical relation, but it is clear that this tissue can present toxicity above the RL, as actually occurred in the HAB of 2017. In this year, PSTs concentrations in viscera were almost three times higher than in 2015 and the PSTs concentration in the siphon exceeded the RL on three dates. These results have important regulatory implications since the siphon could present a concentration above the RL if there is a high accumulation of PSTs in viscera.
The mouse bioassay (MBA; Anon, 2005) was the only approved method for PSTs detection in shellfish for regulatory purposes. Recently, European Community, Canada (Turner et al., 2012a), and United States (U.S. Food and Drug Administration, 2015) sanitary legislations included HPLC-based methodologies as alternative methods to monitor these toxins. The presence of M-type toxins in shellfish represents a monitoring challenge since the MBA will be eliminated from sanitary monitoring programs. There are no certified reference standards of these toxins and its quantification and toxicity estimation have been performed based on structure-activity relations with other saxitoxin analogs (Dell’Aversano et al., 2008). In the case of P. globosa, we estimated that M toxins represented up to 49% of calculated total toxicity in some samples. Furthermore, the contribution of M-toxins to total toxicity was not dependent on the depuration process in the clam. The relative concentration of these analogs did not vary with time after the clams were exposed to G. catenatum. Importantly, P. globosa represents a potential source of these toxins for isolation due to high concentrations found in viscera. The results obtained in the present work are important to elucidate biotransformation pathways in the metabolism of PSTs in an economically important bivalve. In addition, they are important to develop management plans for the P. globosa fishery since PST producing blooms have become recurrent (last documented bloom occurred in January 2018) in the last years in the NGC.
Author Contributions
JM-E processed geoduck samples for PSTs determination, analyzed and interpreted the data, checked the data for accuracy and integrity, and wrote the manuscript. EG-M interpreted and reviewed the data for accuracy and integrity, wrote and edited the manuscript. AT performed HILIC-MS/MS analysis, revised and corrected the manuscript. YS-B and RM-M performed phytoplankton analysis and interpreted the associated data.
Funding
This work was supported by CONACyT scholarship 242882 – CV 353239; FORDECYT – CONACyT project number 260040-2015; Red Temática sobre Florecimientos Algales Nocivos, CONACyT (RedFAN), 2015–2017 projects; and Cefas, Seedcorn internal funding (contract code DP345).
Conflict of Interest Statement
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Acknowledgments
We thank Atenea en el Mar company for providing geoduck and water samples and Dr. Juan Blanco for the guide and invaluable comments that helped to improve the work. We also thank Dr. Marcela Ovalle Marroquin and Dr. David Rivas for the review of the final draft of the manuscript.
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Keywords: Gymnodinium catenatum, HPLC-PCOX, HILIC-MS/MS, harmful algae bloom, saxitoxin
Citation: Medina-Elizalde J, García-Mendoza E, Turner AD, Sánchez-Bravo YA and Murillo-Martínez R (2018) Transformation and Depuration of Paralytic Shellfish Toxins in the Geoduck Clam Panopea globosa From the Northern Gulf of California. Front. Mar. Sci. 5:335. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00335
Received: 02 July 2018; Accepted: 29 August 2018;
Published: 24 September 2018.
Edited by:
Marius Nils Müller, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, BrazilReviewed by:
Paulo João Vieira Vale, Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera (IPMA), PortugalLuiza Dy Fonseca Costa, Fundação Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Brazil
Copyright © 2018 Medina-Elizalde, García-Mendoza, Turner, Sánchez-Bravo and Murillo-Martínez. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Ernesto García-Mendoza, ergarcia@cicese.mx Jennifer Medina-Elizalde, jennifer.medina.elizalde@gmail.com