Phycotoxins are a diverse group of poisonous substances produced by certain seaweed and algae in marine and fresh waters and are important to the scientific community for many reasons, the most obvious being that they pose food safety issues which requires a large investment to regularly monitor the presence of these compounds in foods.
Phycotoxins: Chemistry and Biochemistry, second edition presents the most updated information available on phycotoxins. Major emphases are given to chemistry and biochemistry, while origins, mechanism of action, toxicology, and analytical methodology are also covered.
Since the publication of the first edition, there have been major advances in the science of marine and aquatic toxins, as well as advances in toxicology, analytical chemistry and pharmacology. This fully revised and updated edition includes several new chapters, including those on ciguatoxins, pinnatoxin, ichthyotoxins, as well as new chapters on food safety control of marine toxins, climate change and water toxins, and microalgae as a source of nutraceuticals.
The book will be of interest to toxicologists, marine, food, and plant scientists, as well as researchers and academics in the areas of food science, medicine, public health, toxicology, pharmacology and marine biology.
Tabela de Conteúdo
List of contributors vii
Preface xiii
1 Analysis of marine toxins: gaps on food safety control of marine toxins 1
Paz Otero and Carmen Alfonso
2 Pharmacology of ciguatoxins 23
Carmen Vale, Álvaro Antelo and Víctor Martín
3 Chemistry of pinnatoxins 49
Phillip Mabe and Armen Zakarian
4 Chemistry and analysis of PSP toxins 69
Ana Botana and Verónica Rey López
5 Chemistry of palytoxin and its analogues 85
Patrizia Ciminiello, Carmela Dell’Aversano and Martino Forino
6 Pharmacology of palytoxins and ostreocins 113
M. Carmen Louzao, María Fraga and Natalia Vilarin~ o
7 Recent insights into anatoxin-a chemical synthesis, biomolecular targets, mechanisms of action and LC-MS detection 137
Custódia Fonseca, Manuel Aureliano, Feras Abbas and Ambrose Furey
8 Therapeutics of marine toxins 181
Eva Alonso and Juan A. Rubiolo
9 Marine toxins as modulators of apoptosis 203
Amparo Alfonso, Andrea Fernández-Araujo and Mercedes R. Vieytes
10 Cyanobacterial toxins 225
Vitor Vasconcelos, Pedro Leão and Alexandre Campos
11 Marine toxins and climate change: the case of PSP from cyanobacteria in coastal lagoons 239
Antonella Lugliè, Silvia Pulina, Milena Bruno, Bachisio Mario Padedda, Cecilia Teodora Satta, and Nicola Sechi
12 Microalgae as a source of nutraceuticals 255
Sushanta Kumar Saha, Edward Mc Hugh, Patrick Murray and Daniel J. Walsh
13 The marine origin of drugs 293
André Horta, Celso Alves, Susete Pinteus and Rui Pedrosa
14 Pharmacology of cylindrospermopsin 317
Juan A. Rubiolo, Diego Alberto Fernández, Henar López and M. Carmen Louzao
15 Pharmacology of the cyclic imines 343
Natalia Vilarinõ, Sara F. Ferreiro, Andrés Crespo and José Gil
16 Diversity of organic structures of marine microbial origin with drug potential 361
Marcel Jaspars, Rainer Ebel and Hai Deng
17 Polyketides as a source of chemical diversity 381
Tanya Beletskaya, Catherine Collins and Patrick Murray
18 Ichthyotoxins 407
John W. La Claire II and Schonna R. Manning
19 Pathological clues of phycotoxin ingestion 463
Manuel Cifuentes, Andrés Crespo and Roberto Bermúdez
Index 513
Sobre o autor
Dr Luis M Botana is Director of the Community Reference Laboratory for Marine Toxins and Head of the Department of Pharmacology, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
Dr Amparo Alfonso is Professor of Pharmacology, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain.