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Effects of copepod chemical cues on intra- and extracellular toxins in two species of Dinophysis

Pourdanandeh, Milad ; Séchet, Véronique ; Carpentier, Liliane ; Réveillon, Damien ; Hervé, Fabienne ; Hubert, Clarisse ; Hess, Philipp and Selander, Erik LU (2025) In Harmful Algae 142.
Abstract

Copepods may contribute to harmful algal bloom formation by selectively rejecting harmful cells. Additionally, copepods and the chemical cues they exude, copepodamides, have been shown to induce increased toxin production in paralytic and amnesic toxin producing microalgae. However, it is unknown if diarrhetic shellfish toxin (DST) producers such as Dinophysis respond to copepods or copepodamides in a similar fashion. Here we expose laboratory cultures of Dinophysis sacculus and D. acuminata to direct grazing by Acartia sp. copepods or copepodamides and measure their toxins after three days. Total Dinophysis-produced toxins (DPTs), okadaic acid, pectenotoxin-2, and C9-diol ester of okadaic acid, increased by 8 - 45 % in D. sacculus but... (More)

Copepods may contribute to harmful algal bloom formation by selectively rejecting harmful cells. Additionally, copepods and the chemical cues they exude, copepodamides, have been shown to induce increased toxin production in paralytic and amnesic toxin producing microalgae. However, it is unknown if diarrhetic shellfish toxin (DST) producers such as Dinophysis respond to copepods or copepodamides in a similar fashion. Here we expose laboratory cultures of Dinophysis sacculus and D. acuminata to direct grazing by Acartia sp. copepods or copepodamides and measure their toxins after three days. Total Dinophysis-produced toxins (DPTs), okadaic acid, pectenotoxin-2, and C9-diol ester of okadaic acid, increased by 8 - 45 % in D. sacculus but was significantly different from controls only in the highest (10 nM) copepodamide treatment whereas toxin content was not affected in D. acuminata. Growth rate was low across all groups and explained up to 91 % of the variation in toxin content. DPTs were redistributed from internal compartments to the extracellular medium in the highest copepodamide treatments (5 - 10 nM), which were two to three times higher than controls and indicates an active release or passive leakage of toxins. Untargeted analysis of endometabolomes indicated significant changes in metabolite profiles for both species in response to the highest copepodamide treatments, independent of known toxins. However, it is not clear whether these are stress responses or caused by more complex mechanisms. The relatively small grazer-induced effect in Dinophysis observed here, compared to several species of Alexandrium and Pseudo-nitzschia reported previously, suggests that DPT production in Dinophysis is likely not induced by copepods, except perhaps in patches with high copepod densities. Thus, DPTs may, represent either a constitutive chemical defence for Dinophysis, or serve an altogether different purpose.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Copepodamides, Diarrhetic shellfish toxins, Dinophysis, Dinophysis-produced toxins, Grazer-induced defences, Harmful algal blooms, Metabolomics, Phycotoxin, Plantherbivore interactions
in
Harmful Algae
volume
142
article number
102793
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:39947851
  • scopus:85214316837
ISSN
1568-9883
DOI
10.1016/j.hal.2024.102793
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors
id
835379e8-818c-4186-ad6d-7627daa92c15
date added to LUP
2025-03-20 14:00:54
date last changed
2025-06-12 19:48:36
@article{835379e8-818c-4186-ad6d-7627daa92c15,
  abstract     = {{<p>Copepods may contribute to harmful algal bloom formation by selectively rejecting harmful cells. Additionally, copepods and the chemical cues they exude, copepodamides, have been shown to induce increased toxin production in paralytic and amnesic toxin producing microalgae. However, it is unknown if diarrhetic shellfish toxin (DST) producers such as Dinophysis respond to copepods or copepodamides in a similar fashion. Here we expose laboratory cultures of Dinophysis sacculus and D. acuminata to direct grazing by Acartia sp. copepods or copepodamides and measure their toxins after three days. Total Dinophysis-produced toxins (DPTs), okadaic acid, pectenotoxin-2, and C9-diol ester of okadaic acid, increased by 8 - 45 % in D. sacculus but was significantly different from controls only in the highest (10 nM) copepodamide treatment whereas toxin content was not affected in D. acuminata. Growth rate was low across all groups and explained up to 91 % of the variation in toxin content. DPTs were redistributed from internal compartments to the extracellular medium in the highest copepodamide treatments (5 - 10 nM), which were two to three times higher than controls and indicates an active release or passive leakage of toxins. Untargeted analysis of endometabolomes indicated significant changes in metabolite profiles for both species in response to the highest copepodamide treatments, independent of known toxins. However, it is not clear whether these are stress responses or caused by more complex mechanisms. The relatively small grazer-induced effect in Dinophysis observed here, compared to several species of Alexandrium and Pseudo-nitzschia reported previously, suggests that DPT production in Dinophysis is likely not induced by copepods, except perhaps in patches with high copepod densities. Thus, DPTs may, represent either a constitutive chemical defence for Dinophysis, or serve an altogether different purpose.</p>}},
  author       = {{Pourdanandeh, Milad and Séchet, Véronique and Carpentier, Liliane and Réveillon, Damien and Hervé, Fabienne and Hubert, Clarisse and Hess, Philipp and Selander, Erik}},
  issn         = {{1568-9883}},
  keywords     = {{Copepodamides; Diarrhetic shellfish toxins; Dinophysis; Dinophysis-produced toxins; Grazer-induced defences; Harmful algal blooms; Metabolomics; Phycotoxin; Plantherbivore interactions}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Harmful Algae}},
  title        = {{Effects of copepod chemical cues on intra- and extracellular toxins in two species of Dinophysis}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2024.102793}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.hal.2024.102793}},
  volume       = {{142}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}