The detrimental effects on human health sometimes observed during blooms of Lingulaulax polyedra have been formerly attributed to the yessotoxin analogs this species produces. In this paper we show that natural concentrations of yessotoxin analogs present in seawater and sea spray aerosols during an unprecedented L. polyedra bloom in 2020 in Southern California did not induce inflammation in mammal macrophage cells, questioning the role played by yessotoxin in causing respiratory irritations. This bloom was associated with unprecedented levels of particulate dimethylsulfoniopropionate (2.74 ± 1.63 to 10.11 ± 1.39 µM), gonyol and several new structural analogs of gonyol. We profiled the metabolic content of dinoflagellate cells and recorded increasing amounts of quaternary amines of the betaine family (carnitine, actinin, ectoine) as the bloom progressed. Being precursors of sulfur and nitrogenous small volatile compounds, we hypothesize that, in addition to their recognized role in climate processes, these sulfur and nitrogenous osmolytes may also play a key role in health-related issues reported during intense L. polyedra blooms.
Osmolyte chemical diversity in Lingulaulax polyedra red tides: a critical overlooked factor to respiratory irritations?
E. Ternon,E. Glukhov,M. Vallet,Julie Dinasquet,Melissa L. Carter,L. Gerwick,William H. Gerwick,C. Anderson
Published 2025 in Harmful Algae
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2025
- Venue
Harmful Algae
- Publication date
2025-11-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Chemistry, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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