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Diverse taxa of cyanobacteria produce beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine, a neurotoxic amino acid
Authors:Cox Paul Alan  Banack Sandra Anne  Murch Susan J  Rasmussen Ulla  Tien Georgia  Bidigare Robert Richard  Metcalf James S  Morrison Louise F  Codd Geoffrey A  Bergman Birgitta
Affiliation:Institute for Ethnomedicine, National Tropical Botanical Garden, Kalaheo, HI 96741, USA. paul@ethnomedicine.org
Abstract:Cyanobacteria can generate molecules hazardous to human health, but production of the known cyanotoxins is taxonomically sporadic. For example, members of a few genera produce hepatotoxic microcystins, whereas production of hepatotoxic nodularins appears to be limited to a single genus. Production of known neurotoxins has also been considered phylogenetically unpredictable. We report here that a single neurotoxin, beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine, may be produced by all known groups of cyanobacteria, including cyanobacterial symbionts and free-living cyanobacteria. The ubiquity of cyanobacteria in terrestrial, as well as freshwater, brackish, and marine environments, suggests a potential for wide-spread human exposure.
Keywords:biomagnification   neurotoxin   symbiosis   amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism–dementia complex
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