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An aquarium hobbist poisoning: Identification of new palytoxins in Palythoa cf. toxica and complete detoxification of the aquarium water by activated carbon

Authors :
Giuseppe Sacco
Marco Pelin
Carmela Dell'Aversano
Patrizia Ciminiello
Javier Montenegro
Silvio Sosa
James Davis Reimer
Massimo Morpurgo
Luciana Tartaglione
Aurelia Tubaro
Tartaglione, L.
Pelin, Marco
Morpurgo, M.
Dell’Aversano, C.
Montenegro, J.
Sacco, G.
Sosa, Silvio
Reimer, J. D.
Ciminiello, P.
Tubaro, Aurelia
Tartaglione, Luciana
Morpurgo, Massimo
Dell'Aversano, Carmela
Montenegro, Javier
Sacco, Giuseppe
Reimer, James D.
Ciminiello, Patrizia
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Palytoxin (PLTX) is a lethal natural toxin often found in Palythoa zoantharians that, together with its congeners, may induce adverse effects in humans after inhalation of toxic aerosols both in open-air and domestic environments, namely in the vicinity of public and private aquaria. In this study, we describe a poisoning of an aquarium hobbyist who was hospitalized after handling a PLTXs-containing zoantharian hexacoral. Furthermore, we provide evidence for water detoxification. The zoantharian was morphologically and genetically identified as Palythoa cf. toxica (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). Palytoxin itself and two new PLTX congeners, a hydroxyPLTX and a deoxyPLTX, were detected and structurally identified by liquid chromatography high resolution multiple stage mass spectrometry (LC-HRMSn, n = 1, 2). Total and individual toxins were quantified by LC-HRMS and sandwich ELISA both in the zoantharian (93.4 and 96.80 μg/g, respectively) and in the transport water (48.3 and 42.56 μg/mL, respectively), with an excellent mean bias of 1.3% between the techniques. Activated carbon adsorbed 99.7% of PLTXs contained in the seawater and this represents a good strategy for preventing aquarium hobbyist poisonings.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0978ab236bbbb2308a7d7b594983c050