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Alexandrium (dinoflagellate)

Alexandrium is a genus of dinoflagellates. It contains some of the dinoflagellate species most harmful to humans, because it produces toxic harmful algal blooms (HAB) that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) in humans. There are about 30 species of Alexandrium that form a clade, defined primarily on morphological characters in their thecal plates.[1]

Alexandrium
Alexandrium minutum
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Diaphoretickes
Clade: SAR
Clade: Alveolata
Phylum: Myzozoa
Superclass: Dinoflagellata
Class: Dinophyceae
Order: Gonyaulacales
Family: Ostreopsidaceae
Genus: Alexandrium
Halim, 1960
Species
  • Alexandrium acatenella
  • Alexandrium affine
  • Alexandrium andersonii
  • Alexandrium australiense
  • Alexandrium balechii
  • Alexandrium camurascutulum
  • Alexandrium catenella
  • Alexandrium cohorticula
  • Alexandrium compressum
  • Alexandrium concavum
  • Alexandrium depressum
  • Alexandrium diversaporum
  • Alexandrium foedum
  • Alexandrium fraterculus
  • Alexandrium gaarderae
  • Alexandrium globosum
  • Alexandrium hiranoi
  • Alexandrium insuetum
  • Alexandrium kutnerae
  • Alexandrium leei
  • Alexandrium margalefii
  • Alexandrium mediterraneum
  • Alexandrium minutum
  • Alexandrium monilatum
  • Alexandrium ostenfeldii
  • Alexandrium pacificum
  • Alexandrium pohangense
  • Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax
  • Alexandrium satoanum
  • Alexandrium tamarense
  • Alexandrium tamyavanichii
  • Alexandrium tamutum
  • Alexandrium taylorii
  • Alexandrium tropicale

Introduction edit

The group was not well-defined in the past and thus, due to interest of its toxic behaviour, people have revised the group through formal tabulation and usage of molecular markers such as the toxic gene, stx4A, to better understand not just the relationship between each species; but more importantly, to tell something about the spread and barriers to the bloom. Even if, much is known about the life cycles related to the blooms, much is still unknown as to how each life stage is triggered and transitions to the next stage. Predation and parasitism have proven to be great barriers for population growth. Learning about the pathways of toxin synthesis can allow us to determine how species of Alexandrium have adapted and co-evolved to persist.[2]

Etymology edit

In the 1960s, an Egyptian researcher by the name of Youssef Halim discovered a red tide along the coast of the Alexandria harbour in Egypt. It was the first described red tide in Egypt and later on, Halim identified and named the culprit as Alexandrium as homage to where it was found and he identified Alexandrium minutum as the genus's type species.[3][4]

History of knowledge edit

Species currently included in Alexandrium have been known for a long time, but initially they were classified in different genera, notably, Gonyaulax. Nonetheless, the first attempt at revising the genus, Gonyaulax, was made by Kofoid in 1911. Kofoid was a very influential biologist during his time. His greatest work was the development of the universal "Kofoid System" that classified dinoflagellates based on plate morphology very detailed drawings and well-defined structures. Unfortunately, however Kofoid divided Gonyaulax into 4 subgenera based on shape, and included several species that should not have been classified under the name Gonyaulax.

Lebour (1925) described a new species called Gonyaulax tamarensis.[5] Whedon and Kofoid in 1936 used the same tabulation as Lebour and described two new species, Gonyaulax acatenella and Gonyaulax catenella.[6] The latter was studied in much more detail due to the fact that it caused paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) in humans, getting it from bivalve mollusks. As more and more species were described, they either put them into the "tamarensis group" or the "catenella group". By no means was it simple to put species into either group and this caused great confusion. The "tamarensis group" was divided into two subgroups and were separated by whether or not one of its thecal plates had contact with the ventral pore or not. Goniodoma and Gonyaulax were very similar. In 1954, Gaarder stated that her Goniodoma species described had very similar characteristics to the "tamarensis group" in Gonyaulax.[7] She is believed to be the first to clarify the differences in the two groups based on the plate tabulation.

In 1960, Halim created the new genus Alexandrium with Alexandrium minutum as the only species described in it and he put it into the "tamarensis group". The "tamarensis group" had become a taxonomical chaos by this time, in part because many scientists had differences in opinion about the species and genus taxonomy included in this group. Many species from the same location had been given several names. The group included for example the genus: Gonyaulax, Goniodoma, Pyrodinium, Alexandrium, Gessnerium, Protogonyaulax, and Glenodinium. In 1971, the group was revised by Steidinger, who suggested that the "tamarensis group" should be separated from Gonyaulax. She also recognized Alexandrium as being part of the group. Meanwhile, in the same year, Balech suggested that the Gonyaulax group should be separated into Alexandrium or Gessnerium.

What gave people interest in studying Alexandrium was because it produces paralytic shellfish toxins (PST). The theory of becoming toxic was that originally, bacteria in the ocean would compete with each other producing toxic by-products. Alexandrium being bacterivorous would ingest these bacteria and gain the ability to produce these PST's. Later studies have shown that indeed if you remove the symbiotic bacteria of specific Alexandrium species, the dinoflagellate produces less toxin. If you put new bacteria into the Alexandrium species, there is no change in toxin production.[8] Nonetheless, this theory needs more evidence to be supported.

Molecular phylogeny edit

Before molecular data, the main way to distinguish between Alexandrium species was to identify whether or not it made chains or if the 1' thecal plate touched the ventral pore or not. (5) However, this was not very effective in distinguishing between different species, especially, as more and more species were described. Hence, taxonomists have organized different species into different species complexes based on gene markers, of which the two most well-established and deadliest ones are the Alexandrium tamarense species complex and the Alexandrium minutum species complex.

Originally, the Alexandrium tamarense species complex included Alexandrium tamarense, Alexandrium fundyense, and Alexandrium catenella. The phylogeny was created using primarily Large Subunit and Small Subunit ribosomal RNA. By constructing using rDNA, researchers found that the phylogeny forms 5 different geographical clades in the Alexandrium tamarense species complex. These are the North American, Western European, Temperate Asian, Tasmanian, Tropical Asian clades, and a Mediterranean clade.[9]

The new revised Alexandrium tamarense species complex is grouped into five clades that are named Groups I-V. There are currently 5 species included in this complex: Alexandrium fundyense (Group I); Alexandrium mediterraneum (Group II); Alexandrium tamarense (Group III); Alexandrium pacificum (Group IV); Alexandrium australiense (Group V).[10]

There are three morphospecies that can be distinguished primarily based on morphology: A. catenella, A. fundyense, and A. tamarense. They have differences in their size (length to width ratio), the presence or absence of the ventral pore attached to the 1' or even the 4' thecal plate, and the differences in other thecal plates. A. catenella can form chains, while A. fundyense and A. tamarense cannot. A. catenalla has a lower length to width ratio than the other two. (5) A. tamarense has a ventral pore, but the other two do not. It has been found that many cells have intermediate morphologies between the morphologies described in A. tamarense and A.fundyense. As well, the ventral pore was sometimes present and sometimes absent in A. fundyense. Although A. catenella is found in the same location as A. fundyense, it is suggested to not include it in the Alexandrium tamarense species complex. Morphological characteristics have been less distinctive than scientist have originally thought.[10]

However, using rDNA has provided more confidence on differentiating them phylogenetically. Using ITS/5.8S genetic distances within and between species, one can differentiate between differences in genomic mismatch between the two species. The genetic distance between the same species was much lower than between different species confirming the distinct species-specific clades. ITS2 compensatory base changes (CBC) are used as genetic markers that is used for studying the diversity of eukaryotic species. CBC in the secondary structure of helix III are present in groups I, II, and V, but absent in groups III and IV. Groups I and III cannot produce viable cysts. Scientists screened for presence or absence of the sxtA4 domain of the sxtA gene to determine the toxicity of each group. Groups I and IV produce saxitoxin, while groups II and III do not. Group V can sometimes produce or not produce saxitoxin. There are several other species that are not included in this group.[10]

Alexandrium minutum species complex includes A. lusitanicum, A. angustitabulatum, A. minutum, A. andersonii, A. tamutum, and A. insuetum. The main difference between this group and the tamarense species complex, is that the A. minutum group species are much smaller and the development of toxicity is much variable, even between different strains. Again, previously this group was defined based on morphology. But the morphology of this group is much more variable, especially in the different strains. A. insuetum was the only species that did not have the 1' plate connected to the ventral pore. Both A. angustitabulatum and A. lusitanicum were very similar in morphology to A. minutum. A. andersonii was the most different from the group and was slightly larger than the average size of the group. A. tamutum is also similar to A. minutum but has a wider 6' plate. Upon new morphological analysis, it was shown that there was no difference between the width of the s.a. plate and the 1' plate which was thought to have been the same in the past.

When constructing the phylogeny, A. minutum is separated into two main clades. The larger clade included strains found in Europe and the South Pacific. The smaller clade included strains found in New Zealand and Taiwan. (6) A. angustitabulatum and A. lusitanicum did not differentiate into separate clades and were included in the A. minutum species complex. Thus researchers have suggested that these two names be no longer separate and be included under the species A. minutum. A. insuetum formed a separate clade and the three strains were separated further; the two Japanese strains were separated from the French strain. As well, A. tamatum also formed a well-supported clade with its 5 strains; the Taiwanese strain was separated but basal to the Italian strains. A. andersonii and A. ostenfeldii were found to be the outgroup and formed the root of the tree.[11]

The A. catenella group includes A. catenella and A. compressum. Their morphological feature is that they form chains with anterior-posterior compressed cells and do not have a ventral pore. The fraterculus group includes A. affine, A. cohorticula, A. fraterculus, A. tamiyavanischii and A. tropicale. The defining feature is that they form chains and have a ventral pore. The kutnera group includes A. kutnera, and A. leei. The defining features is that it has a ventral pore. The ostenfeldii species complex includes A. ostenfeldii, and A. peruvianum, which are now considered synonyms. The defining feature is that they have a narrow 1' plate and a large ventral pore. Some strains of these species can also produce a different toxin called spirolides. The pseudogonyaulax group includes A. pseudogonyaulax, A. hiranoi, A. taylorii, A.satoanum, and A.monilatum. The common feature of this group is that they do not form chains and produce goniodomins. The rest of the species have not been for the most part well-documented taxonomically and thus, there is limited molecular analysis on their phylogeny. Hence, the phylogeny of the other species need to be revised.[12]

A publication in an obscure journal has suggested that Alexandrium should be split in different genera,[13] but a wide consensus has agreed not to follow this suggestion.[14]

Habitat and ecology edit

Alexandrium as a whole is wide spread across the globe and has been identified in different parts of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. The genus can be found in oligotrophic, mesotrophic, and eutrophic coastlines. During the winter months of temperate regions, the cysts remain dormant because of the cold temperatures. They also have an internal biological clock that tells them when to germinate and thus, is the reason most of the blooms are season driven. Cysts of A. tamarense can tolerate temperatures of −0.6 to 26.8 °C and this enables them to be well-distributed in marine seabeds. They cannot tolerate being anoxic. There may be large numbers of cyst populations, but only 20% of them can germinate and develop into a bloom, because oxygen is present mostly a few millimeters inside the sediment. Cysts have been observed to have prominent roles in genetic diversity of subpopulations and in gene flow between subpopulations. With a few exceptions, the toxic and non-toxic forms do not overlap in range because these two forms are distinct biological species that have limited sexual compatibility to other species. Scientists have observed hybrids of toxic and non-toxic forms produce lethal cells.[15]

Alexandrium is an opportunistic dinoflagellate and thus it can bloom in nutrient-rich and nutrient-poor areas. For most species, in order for the bloom to be positively regulated it must be in a water body with high surface water temperatures, maximum water column stability, low nutrients, and low winds.[15]

In salt ponds, Alexandrium population growth rates depend on salinity and temperature. However, in areas like the Bay of Fundy, bloom dynamics depend more readily on the mixing of tidal waters in the open region. In salt ponds, A. fundyense migrate vertically down at night, but migrate closer to the surface of the pond during the day. However, they do not migrate too close to the surface to be flushed out with the outflowing surface water. (3) The hydro-geographical barrier and the organism's behavior restrict blooms to occur in neighbouring waters, and thus, result in high concentration of toxicity accumulating in shellfish.[15]

Other oceanographic forces include the mechanisms of upwelling winds and downwelling winds that can also play a role in bloom concentration. (10) Upwelling winds result in pushing the cells off the coast. (10) This can decline the bloom populations. However, when wind is pushing the bloom offshore, the vegetative cells can encyst and sink to the bottom of the sediment. (10) Once wind levels decrease, they transform into vegetative cells again. (3)(10) On the other hand, downwelling winds can allow the cells to be brought back to the coast and resurfaced. (10) This can have the opposite effect of localizing blooms and thereby increasing toxic concentration. (10)

The time length of the blooms occur around 2–3 months. Generally, warm temperatures and sufficient nutrient concentrations can provide for excellent growth. However, even with optimal temperatures, Alexandrium populations can be declining and this has more to do with the life cycle than what was thought to do with things like predation and parasitism. Sexuality happens well before the bloom population peaks, and a large fraction of the bloom population is mating to produce cysts that fall to the sediment. Hence, experiments have shown that temperature and nutrient availability can regulate sexuality and encystment. It has been shown that A.catenella relies on organic nutrients produced by diatom blooms and or from picocyanobacterial. Such observations may be a reason why blooms from other protists like diatoms correlate with blooms of Alexandrium.[15]

Alexandrium has been increasingly more common in large city harbours, for example along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. High Alexandrium growth has also been typically found in low salinity freshwater plumes. Freshwater runoffs have high organic matter, and other micronutrients, such as high iron content. Even though humans have definitely increased the amount of biomatter in the ocean, we cannot directly correlate an increase in range of Alexandrium blooms because of human activity. This is because most blooms occur in remote and pristine waters in places like Alaska and Southern Argentina.[15]

As autotrophs, Alexandrium produces oxygen by consuming inorganic carbon. Organic carbon is not excreted as much compared to other phytoplankton. Inorganic carbon fixation increased or decreased either with an increase or decrease in nitrogen uptake, depending on the nutrition of the cell. Alexandrium accumulates ammonium internally.[15]

Many species are also mixotrophs and have been observed to contain bacteria and flagellates inside food vacuoles. A. minutum can ingest cyanobacteria. A. catenella can ingest heterotrophic bacteria and cyanobacteria. A. tamarense ingests haptophytes, cryptophytes, small diatoms, and Heterosigma akashiwo. A. tamarense has also been observed eating other dinoflagellates such as Amphidinium carterae and Prorocentrum minimum. Blooms can be terminated because of cell lysis, infection from viruses and/or bacteria, parasites, and encystment. Both heterotrophic and mixotrophic dinoflagellates feed on Alexandrium. as does the ciliate Favella. Amoebophrya (a parasitic dinoflagellate) and Parvilucifera (a perkinsozoan flagellate), are known to infect Alexandrium species. Specifically, Parvilucifer infects the mobile zygote and pellicle cyst of A. minutum.[15]

Morphology and anatomy edit

Alexandrium has a typical dinoflagellate morphology, with the episome, cingulum, hyposome, and sulcus. It has two flagella: a transverse flagellum around the cingulum groove called the girdle, and the longitudinal flagellum that extends outwards from the sulcal groove. It has an ornamented theca. The morphology of Alexandrium is variable but, the genus Alexandrium can be separated from Gessnerium by having the 1' plate directly or indirectly connected to the extreme, anterior plate, Po.[4] Generally, the Po is large and oval. The Po has a cavity called the aperture which is mostly comma-shaped. There are many small pores on the outside of the comma and the apical plates. Species that produce chains have secondary pores that are located most of the time dorsally on the comma.[4] These pores are not found in the cingular and sulcal plates.

Life cycle edit

Alexandrium has a zygotic lifecycle. In the vegetative phase, the species are haploid and under certain circumstances related to stress, the vegetative cells can transform into non-motile pellicle cysts with a thin cell wall. (3) The vegetative phase and pellicle cyst stage are very flexible and Alexandrium species can often switch back to vegetative cells when the stress has been removed or decreased. (3) In the vegetative phase, cells divide through desmoschisis: each daughter cell retains half the thecal plates of the mother. Some species such as A. taylorii and A. hiranoi can produce non-motile dividing cysts that have the ability to divide, where the formation of these cysts are restricted to the dark phase and germination in the light phase.[15]

The triggering of pellicle cyst formation is often due to turbulence, presence of parasites, and or passage through the gut of grazers. Thus, one of the defense mechanisms that Alexandrium deploys against parasites, is by becoming pellicle cysts which makes them more resistant to parasitic infection. Some species have evolved forming chains to give them an advantage. It is suggested that forming chains is in response to high turbulence, to swimming faster than single cells allowing them to migrate farther or deeper, and a defense mechanism for reducing grazing.[15]

During the sexual phase, the vegetative cells can form gametes that conjugate, resulting in what is called a diploid planozygote that can transform into a resting cyst called a hypnozygote. In some species, the planozygote can go through meiosis and produce a vegetative cell. The gametes can recognize each-other by the help of agglutinin-like compounds and the gametes can then fuse on their ventral side, producing a biflagellated diploid planozygote. The gametes of Alexandrium are the same as vegetative cells or they can be smaller in size.[15]

The time the hypnozygote spends in the sediment is most likely related to the specific species and or environmental factors. Temperature changes have also been shown to produce varying amounts of cysts. In the case of A. tamarense, specific bacteria may inhibit or trigger cyst production. In colder temperatures, the maturation length may be prolonged. The bloom of some species is seasonally driven, or the bloom can be regulated by environmental forces (e.g. temperature), in addition to being seasonally driven. Under the right conditions, the hypnozygote germinates and releases a motile cell called a planomeiocyte. The sexual cycle is complete once the planomeiocyte divides and produces vegetative cells again.[15]

Genetics edit

The cell cycle is composed of the typical eukaryotic stages in M1, S Phase, G1 and G2. It goes through a light/dark dependent manner. During the night, the cells are haploid and have only one copy of the DNA. During the day, the population is in S phase with two copies of DNA. They go through closed mitosis. G2 to M phase is regulated by nutrient factors, while the S phase is controlled through light/dark timing. Alexandrium species must be of proper size before then can enter S and G2 phase. Alexandrium fundyense increases greatly in size during the G2/M phase and after mitosis, it decreases in size. Other species can produce DNA through the entirety of the cell cycle. Thus, researchers have said that going through G1 is light dependent and going through S phase is size dependent.[16][17]

The specific toxins produced are regulated by the nuclear genes. The genome mass is upwards of 200 pg DNA. It has up to 150 chromosomes that have permanently condensed chromatin. Both the plastid genome and the mitochondrial genome are typical of normal dinoflagellates. For example, in the case of plastid genomes, the number of plastid genes have reduced because they have become nuclear encoded instead. In A. tamarense, researchers have identified 48 non-minicircle encoded photosystem genes which are found in the nuclear genome. 15 genes that are supposed to be found in the plastid genome have become nuclear encoded instead in A. tamarense. Hence, the plastid genome has been reduced to 15 single-gene minicircles. The mitochondrial genome is also greatly reduced to only having cob, cox1, and cox3 protein coding genes.[18] They also have lost the complex 1 oxidative phosphorylation genes and A. tamarense has replaced it with NADH dehydrogenase 2 (NDH-2).[19] In the case of A. catenella, translation of the mitochondrial genome, does not require initiation and termination codons.[20]

Fossil record edit

Although Alexandrium does not fossilize very well. The resting cysts can fossilize somewhat. Some researchers have hypothetically calculated that the average age of Alexandrium is 77 million years old which is going back to the Cretaceous period. What allowed Alexandrium to increase greatly was the mass extinction in the Cretaceous period (65 MYA) and the great increase in temperature of the sea in the Paleocene Era (55 MYA). These two events reduced Alexandrium competitors and also made it more favorable for it to increase in size. The rise of the isthmus of Panama that happened between 3–13 MYA subdivided and separated many species into distinct geographical populations. This had profound effect on the Alexandrium tamarense species complex. In the present day, their population is much smaller than what was before.[21]

Practical importance edit

Alexandrium produces a variety of toxic derivatives. The first group of toxins it produces includes carbomoyltoxins: saxitoxin (STX), neosaxitoxin (NEO), and C-11 O-sulfated analogues gonyautoxins (GTX1-GTX4). The other group of toxins made is the N-21 sulfocarbamoyl analogues (B1=GTX5, B2= GTX6, C1-C4). Toxin production seems to be genetically specific in the different Alexandrium species, but the cell toxin content is much more variable and thus, not a very good molecular marker for phylogeny. However, it seems that with distinct geographical locations, there may be differences in the PSP toxin composition of Alexandrium species or even strains. There may be selective forces that favour certain cysts with particular toxin composition.[15]

PSP toxin is produced in the G1 phase of the cell cycle and spirolides are produced in the G2 phase of the cell cycle. Specific polyketide (PKS) genes are involved in spirolide biosynthesis. Spirolide is composed of acetate with an imine moiety. The Saxitoxin pathway is generally the same in dinoflagellates and cyanobacteria, but the transcripts of the dinoflagellates occur in multiple copies, meaning it is monocistronic, and have splice leader sequences. Lytic allelochemicals target external cell membranes of other protists. In particular, lytic compounds in A. tamarense can increase the permeability of Ca2+ ions in other protist cell membranes. Waterborne cues from copepods can upregulate PSP toxin content in Alexandrium and differentially regulate genes by regulating the serine/threonine kinase signalling transduction pathway.[15]

Alexandrium blooms cause PSP poisoning in bivalve molluscs, but they can also cause damage to fish farms resulting large losses local or large businesses. Many salmon are affected every year in Canada because of Alexandrium blooms. A. catenella can cause low gill viability. A. catenella causes tissue damage in gills, by primarily producing reactive oxygen species or ROS.[22]

References edit

  1. ^ Murray, S.A., John, Uwe., Kremp, Anke. (2015): Alexandrium spp: genetic and ecological factors influencing saxitoxin production and proliferation. Climate Change and Marine and Freshwater Toxins. 123–139.
  2. ^ Anderson, D.M., Alpermann, T.J., Cembella, A.D., Collos, Y., Masseret, E., Montresor, M. 2012: The globally distributed genus Alexandrium: Multifaceted roles in marine ecosystems and impacts on human health. Harmful Algae. 14(2012): 10–35. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2011.10.012
  3. ^ Halim, Y., 1960. Alexandrium minutum n. gen. n. sp., dinoflagellé provocant “des eaux rouges”. Vie et Milieu, 11, 102–105.
  4. ^ a b c Balech, Enrique. 1995: The Genus Alexandrium Halim (Dinoflagellata). Sherkin Island Marine Station, Sherkin Island, Co., Cork, Ireland.
  5. ^ Lebour, M.V., 1925. The dinoflagellates of northern seas. Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, Plymouth, p. i–vi, 1–250, 35 pl.
  6. ^ Whedon, W.F., Kofoid, C.A., 1936. Dinoflagellata of the San Francisco region. I. On the skeletal morphology of two species, Gonyaulax catenella and G. acatenella. University of California Publications in Zoology 41(4), 25–34.
  7. ^ Gaarder, K.R., 1954a. Dinoflagellates from the Michael Sars North Atlantic Deep-Sea Expedition 1910. Report on the Scientific Results of the „Michael Sars“ North Atlant. Deep-Sea Exped. 1910, University of Bergen, John Grieg, Bergen 2(3), 1–62 + Tabl. 1–5.
  8. ^ Gallacher, S., Smith, E.A. 1999: Bacteria and Paralytic Shellfish Toxins. Protist. 150: 245–255. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1434-4610(99)70027-1
  9. ^ Gu, H., Zeng, N., Liu, T., Yang, W., Muller, A., Krock, B. 2013: Morphology, toxicity, and phylogeny of Alexandrium (Dinophyceae) species along the coast of China. Harmful Algae. 27(2013): 68–81. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2013.05.008
  10. ^ a b c Lilly, E.L., Halanych, K.M., and Anderson, D.M. 2005: Phylogeny, biogeography, and species boundaries within the Alexandrium minutum group. Harmful Algae. 4(2005): 1004–1020. doi:10.1016/j.hal.2005.02.001
  11. ^ Scholin, C.A., Hallegraff, G.M., Anderson, D.M. 1995: Molecular evolution of the Alexandrium tamarense 'species complex' (Dinophyceae): dispersal in the North American and West Pacific regions. Phycologia. 34(6): 472–485. 10.2216/i0031-8884-34-6-472.1
  12. ^ John, U., Litaker, R.W., Montresor, M., Murray, S., Brosnahan, M.L., and Anderson, D.M. 2014: Formal Revision of the Alexandrium tamarense Species Complex (Dinophyceae) Taxonomy: The introduction of Five Species with Emphasis on Molecular-based (rDNA) Classification. Protist. 165: 779–804. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.protis.2014.10.001
  13. ^ Gómez, F., Artigas, L.F., 2019. Redefinition of the dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium based on Centrodinium: Reinstatement of Gessnerium and Protogonyaulax, and Episemicolon gen. nov. Hindawi Journal of Marine Biology, 1284104.
  14. ^ Mertens, K.N., Adachi, M., Anderson, D.M., Band-Schmidt, C., Bravo, I., Brosnahan, M.L., Bolch, C.J., Calado, A.J., Carbonell-Moore, M.C., Chomérat, N., Elbrächter, M., Figueroa, R.I., Fraga, S., Gárate-Lizárraga, I., Garcés, E., Gu, H., Hallegraeff, G., Hess, P., Hoppenrath, M., Horiguchi, T., Iwataki, M., John, U., Kremp, A., Larsen, J., Leaw, C.P., Li, Z., Lim, P.T., Litaker, W., MacKenzie, L., Masseret, E., Matsuoka, K., Moestrup, Ø., Montresor, M., Nagai, S., Nézan, E., Nishimura, T., Okolodkov, Y.B., Orlova, T.Y., Reñé, A., Sampedro, N., Satta, C.T., Shin, H.H., Siano, R., Smith, K.F., Steidinger, K., Takano, Y., Tillmann, U., Wolny, J., Yamaguchi, A., Murray, S. 2020. Morphological and phylogenetic data do not support the split of Alexandrium into four genera. Harmful Algae 98, 101902
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Anderson, D.M. 1997: Bloom dynamics of toxic Alexandrium species in the northeastern U.S. Limnol. Oceanogr. 42(5): 1009–1022. 10.4319/lo.1997.42.5_part_2.1009
  16. ^ Aroncher-Oldenburg, Gaspar., Kulis, D.M., Anderson, D.M. 1997: Toxin variability during the cell cycle of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense. Limnol. Oceanogr. 42(5): 1178–1188. 10.4319/lo.1997.42.5_part_2.1178
  17. ^ Dapena, C., Bravo, I., Cuadrado, A., Figueroa, R.L. 2015: Nuclear and Cell Morphological Changes during the Cell Cycle and Growth of the Toxic Dinoflagellate Alexandrium. Protist. 166: 144–160 10.1016/j.protis.2015.01.001
  18. ^ Wisecaver, J.H., Broshahan, M.L., Hackett, J.D. 2013: Horizontal Gene Transfer is a Significant Driver of Gene Innovation in Dinoflagellates. Genome Biol. Evol. 5(12): 2368–2381. doi:10.1093/gbe/evt179
  19. ^ Hackett, J.D., Yoon, H.S., Bento Soares, M, Bonaldo, M.F., Casavant, T.L., Scheetz, T.E., Nosenko, T, Bhattacharya, D. 2004: Migration of the plastid genome to the nucleus in a peridinin dinoflagellate. Current Biology. 14(3): 213–318. 10.1016/S0960-9822(04)00042-9
  20. ^ Kamikawa, R, Nishimura, H, Sako, Y. 2009: Analysis of the mitochondrial genome transcripts, and electron transport activity in the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella (Gonyaulacales, Dinophyceae). Phycological Research. 57(1): 1–11. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1835.2008.00511.x
  21. ^ John, U., Fensome, R.A., Medlin, L.K. 2003: The Application of a Molecular Clock Based on Molecular Sequences and the Fossil Record to Explain Biogeographic Distributions Within the Alexandrium tamarense ‘‘Species Complex’’ (Dinophyceae). Mol. Biol. Evol. 20(7): 1015–1027. 10.1093/molbev/msg105
  22. ^ Mardones, J.I., Dorantes-Aranda, J.J., Nichols, P.D., Hallegraeff, G. 2015: Fish gill damage by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella from Chilean fjords: Synergistic action of ROS and PUFA. Harmful Algae. 49: 40–49. 10.1016/j.hal.2015.09.001

External links edit

  • Anderson lab
  • Harmful Algae
  • Harmful Algal Bloom (HAB)-Associated Illness

alexandrium, dinoflagellate, alexandrium, genus, dinoflagellates, contains, some, dinoflagellate, species, most, harmful, humans, because, produces, toxic, harmful, algal, blooms, that, cause, paralytic, shellfish, poisoning, humans, there, about, species, ale. Alexandrium is a genus of dinoflagellates It contains some of the dinoflagellate species most harmful to humans because it produces toxic harmful algal blooms HAB that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning PSP in humans There are about 30 species of Alexandrium that form a clade defined primarily on morphological characters in their thecal plates 1 Alexandrium Alexandrium minutum Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Clade Diaphoretickes Clade SAR Clade Alveolata Phylum Myzozoa Superclass Dinoflagellata Class Dinophyceae Order Gonyaulacales Family Ostreopsidaceae Genus AlexandriumHalim 1960 Species Alexandrium acatenella Alexandrium affine Alexandrium andersonii Alexandrium australiense Alexandrium balechii Alexandrium camurascutulum Alexandrium catenella Alexandrium cohorticula Alexandrium compressum Alexandrium concavum Alexandrium depressum Alexandrium diversaporum Alexandrium foedum Alexandrium fraterculus Alexandrium gaarderae Alexandrium globosum Alexandrium hiranoi Alexandrium insuetum Alexandrium kutnerae Alexandrium leei Alexandrium margalefii Alexandrium mediterraneum Alexandrium minutum Alexandrium monilatum Alexandrium ostenfeldii Alexandrium pacificum Alexandrium pohangense Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax Alexandrium satoanum Alexandrium tamarense Alexandrium tamyavanichii Alexandrium tamutum Alexandrium taylorii Alexandrium tropicale Contents 1 Introduction 2 Etymology 3 History of knowledge 4 Molecular phylogeny 5 Habitat and ecology 6 Morphology and anatomy 7 Life cycle 8 Genetics 9 Fossil record 10 Practical importance 11 References 12 External linksIntroduction editThe group was not well defined in the past and thus due to interest of its toxic behaviour people have revised the group through formal tabulation and usage of molecular markers such as the toxic gene stx4A to better understand not just the relationship between each species but more importantly to tell something about the spread and barriers to the bloom Even if much is known about the life cycles related to the blooms much is still unknown as to how each life stage is triggered and transitions to the next stage Predation and parasitism have proven to be great barriers for population growth Learning about the pathways of toxin synthesis can allow us to determine how species of Alexandrium have adapted and co evolved to persist 2 Etymology editIn the 1960s an Egyptian researcher by the name of Youssef Halim discovered a red tide along the coast of the Alexandria harbour in Egypt It was the first described red tide in Egypt and later on Halim identified and named the culprit as Alexandrium as homage to where it was found and he identified Alexandrium minutum as the genus s type species 3 4 History of knowledge editSpecies currently included in Alexandrium have been known for a long time but initially they were classified in different genera notably Gonyaulax Nonetheless the first attempt at revising the genus Gonyaulax was made by Kofoid in 1911 Kofoid was a very influential biologist during his time His greatest work was the development of the universal Kofoid System that classified dinoflagellates based on plate morphology very detailed drawings and well defined structures Unfortunately however Kofoid divided Gonyaulax into 4 subgenera based on shape and included several species that should not have been classified under the name Gonyaulax Lebour 1925 described a new species called Gonyaulax tamarensis 5 Whedon and Kofoid in 1936 used the same tabulation as Lebour and described two new species Gonyaulax acatenella and Gonyaulax catenella 6 The latter was studied in much more detail due to the fact that it caused paralytic shellfish poisoning PSP in humans getting it from bivalve mollusks As more and more species were described they either put them into the tamarensis group or the catenella group By no means was it simple to put species into either group and this caused great confusion The tamarensis group was divided into two subgroups and were separated by whether or not one of its thecal plates had contact with the ventral pore or not Goniodoma and Gonyaulax were very similar In 1954 Gaarder stated that her Goniodoma species described had very similar characteristics to the tamarensis group in Gonyaulax 7 She is believed to be the first to clarify the differences in the two groups based on the plate tabulation In 1960 Halim created the new genus Alexandrium with Alexandrium minutum as the only species described in it and he put it into the tamarensis group The tamarensis group had become a taxonomical chaos by this time in part because many scientists had differences in opinion about the species and genus taxonomy included in this group Many species from the same location had been given several names The group included for example the genus Gonyaulax Goniodoma Pyrodinium Alexandrium Gessnerium Protogonyaulax and Glenodinium In 1971 the group was revised by Steidinger who suggested that the tamarensis group should be separated from Gonyaulax She also recognized Alexandrium as being part of the group Meanwhile in the same year Balech suggested that the Gonyaulax group should be separated into Alexandrium or Gessnerium What gave people interest in studying Alexandrium was because it produces paralytic shellfish toxins PST The theory of becoming toxic was that originally bacteria in the ocean would compete with each other producing toxic by products Alexandrium being bacterivorous would ingest these bacteria and gain the ability to produce these PST s Later studies have shown that indeed if you remove the symbiotic bacteria of specific Alexandrium species the dinoflagellate produces less toxin If you put new bacteria into the Alexandrium species there is no change in toxin production 8 Nonetheless this theory needs more evidence to be supported Molecular phylogeny editBefore molecular data the main way to distinguish between Alexandrium species was to identify whether or not it made chains or if the 1 thecal plate touched the ventral pore or not 5 However this was not very effective in distinguishing between different species especially as more and more species were described Hence taxonomists have organized different species into different species complexes based on gene markers of which the two most well established and deadliest ones are the Alexandrium tamarense species complex and the Alexandrium minutum species complex Originally the Alexandrium tamarense species complex included Alexandrium tamarense Alexandrium fundyense and Alexandrium catenella The phylogeny was created using primarily Large Subunit and Small Subunit ribosomal RNA By constructing using rDNA researchers found that the phylogeny forms 5 different geographical clades in the Alexandrium tamarense species complex These are the North American Western European Temperate Asian Tasmanian Tropical Asian clades and a Mediterranean clade 9 The new revised Alexandrium tamarense species complex is grouped into five clades that are named Groups I V There are currently 5 species included in this complex Alexandrium fundyense Group I Alexandrium mediterraneum Group II Alexandrium tamarense Group III Alexandrium pacificum Group IV Alexandrium australiense Group V 10 There are three morphospecies that can be distinguished primarily based on morphology A catenella A fundyense and A tamarense They have differences in their size length to width ratio the presence or absence of the ventral pore attached to the 1 or even the 4 thecal plate and the differences in other thecal plates A catenella can form chains while A fundyense and A tamarense cannot A catenalla has a lower length to width ratio than the other two 5 A tamarense has a ventral pore but the other two do not It has been found that many cells have intermediate morphologies between the morphologies described in A tamarense and A fundyense As well the ventral pore was sometimes present and sometimes absent in A fundyense Although A catenella is found in the same location as A fundyense it is suggested to not include it in the Alexandrium tamarense species complex Morphological characteristics have been less distinctive than scientist have originally thought 10 However using rDNA has provided more confidence on differentiating them phylogenetically Using ITS 5 8S genetic distances within and between species one can differentiate between differences in genomic mismatch between the two species The genetic distance between the same species was much lower than between different species confirming the distinct species specific clades ITS2 compensatory base changes CBC are used as genetic markers that is used for studying the diversity of eukaryotic species CBC in the secondary structure of helix III are present in groups I II and V but absent in groups III and IV Groups I and III cannot produce viable cysts Scientists screened for presence or absence of the sxtA4 domain of the sxtA gene to determine the toxicity of each group Groups I and IV produce saxitoxin while groups II and III do not Group V can sometimes produce or not produce saxitoxin There are several other species that are not included in this group 10 Alexandrium minutum species complex includes A lusitanicum A angustitabulatum A minutum A andersonii A tamutum and A insuetum The main difference between this group and the tamarense species complex is that the A minutum group species are much smaller and the development of toxicity is much variable even between different strains Again previously this group was defined based on morphology But the morphology of this group is much more variable especially in the different strains A insuetum was the only species that did not have the 1 plate connected to the ventral pore Both A angustitabulatum and A lusitanicum were very similar in morphology to A minutum A andersonii was the most different from the group and was slightly larger than the average size of the group A tamutum is also similar to A minutum but has a wider 6 plate Upon new morphological analysis it was shown that there was no difference between the width of the s a plate and the 1 plate which was thought to have been the same in the past When constructing the phylogeny A minutum is separated into two main clades The larger clade included strains found in Europe and the South Pacific The smaller clade included strains found in New Zealand and Taiwan 6 A angustitabulatum and A lusitanicum did not differentiate into separate clades and were included in the A minutum species complex Thus researchers have suggested that these two names be no longer separate and be included under the species A minutum A insuetum formed a separate clade and the three strains were separated further the two Japanese strains were separated from the French strain As well A tamatum also formed a well supported clade with its 5 strains the Taiwanese strain was separated but basal to the Italian strains A andersonii and A ostenfeldii were found to be the outgroup and formed the root of the tree 11 The A catenella group includes A catenella and A compressum Their morphological feature is that they form chains with anterior posterior compressed cells and do not have a ventral pore The fraterculus group includes A affine A cohorticula A fraterculus A tamiyavanischii and A tropicale The defining feature is that they form chains and have a ventral pore The kutnera group includes A kutnera and A leei The defining features is that it has a ventral pore The ostenfeldii species complex includes A ostenfeldii and A peruvianum which are now considered synonyms The defining feature is that they have a narrow 1 plate and a large ventral pore Some strains of these species can also produce a different toxin called spirolides The pseudogonyaulax group includes A pseudogonyaulax A hiranoi A taylorii A satoanum and A monilatum The common feature of this group is that they do not form chains and produce goniodomins The rest of the species have not been for the most part well documented taxonomically and thus there is limited molecular analysis on their phylogeny Hence the phylogeny of the other species need to be revised 12 A publication in an obscure journal has suggested that Alexandrium should be split in different genera 13 but a wide consensus has agreed not to follow this suggestion 14 Habitat and ecology editAlexandrium as a whole is wide spread across the globe and has been identified in different parts of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere The genus can be found in oligotrophic mesotrophic and eutrophic coastlines During the winter months of temperate regions the cysts remain dormant because of the cold temperatures They also have an internal biological clock that tells them when to germinate and thus is the reason most of the blooms are season driven Cysts of A tamarense can tolerate temperatures of 0 6 to 26 8 C and this enables them to be well distributed in marine seabeds They cannot tolerate being anoxic There may be large numbers of cyst populations but only 20 of them can germinate and develop into a bloom because oxygen is present mostly a few millimeters inside the sediment Cysts have been observed to have prominent roles in genetic diversity of subpopulations and in gene flow between subpopulations With a few exceptions the toxic and non toxic forms do not overlap in range because these two forms are distinct biological species that have limited sexual compatibility to other species Scientists have observed hybrids of toxic and non toxic forms produce lethal cells 15 Alexandrium is an opportunistic dinoflagellate and thus it can bloom in nutrient rich and nutrient poor areas For most species in order for the bloom to be positively regulated it must be in a water body with high surface water temperatures maximum water column stability low nutrients and low winds 15 In salt ponds Alexandrium population growth rates depend on salinity and temperature However in areas like the Bay of Fundy bloom dynamics depend more readily on the mixing of tidal waters in the open region In salt ponds A fundyense migrate vertically down at night but migrate closer to the surface of the pond during the day However they do not migrate too close to the surface to be flushed out with the outflowing surface water 3 The hydro geographical barrier and the organism s behavior restrict blooms to occur in neighbouring waters and thus result in high concentration of toxicity accumulating in shellfish 15 Other oceanographic forces include the mechanisms of upwelling winds and downwelling winds that can also play a role in bloom concentration 10 Upwelling winds result in pushing the cells off the coast 10 This can decline the bloom populations However when wind is pushing the bloom offshore the vegetative cells can encyst and sink to the bottom of the sediment 10 Once wind levels decrease they transform into vegetative cells again 3 10 On the other hand downwelling winds can allow the cells to be brought back to the coast and resurfaced 10 This can have the opposite effect of localizing blooms and thereby increasing toxic concentration 10 The time length of the blooms occur around 2 3 months Generally warm temperatures and sufficient nutrient concentrations can provide for excellent growth However even with optimal temperatures Alexandrium populations can be declining and this has more to do with the life cycle than what was thought to do with things like predation and parasitism Sexuality happens well before the bloom population peaks and a large fraction of the bloom population is mating to produce cysts that fall to the sediment Hence experiments have shown that temperature and nutrient availability can regulate sexuality and encystment It has been shown that A catenella relies on organic nutrients produced by diatom blooms and or from picocyanobacterial Such observations may be a reason why blooms from other protists like diatoms correlate with blooms of Alexandrium 15 Alexandrium has been increasingly more common in large city harbours for example along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea High Alexandrium growth has also been typically found in low salinity freshwater plumes Freshwater runoffs have high organic matter and other micronutrients such as high iron content Even though humans have definitely increased the amount of biomatter in the ocean we cannot directly correlate an increase in range of Alexandrium blooms because of human activity This is because most blooms occur in remote and pristine waters in places like Alaska and Southern Argentina 15 As autotrophs Alexandrium produces oxygen by consuming inorganic carbon Organic carbon is not excreted as much compared to other phytoplankton Inorganic carbon fixation increased or decreased either with an increase or decrease in nitrogen uptake depending on the nutrition of the cell Alexandrium accumulates ammonium internally 15 Many species are also mixotrophs and have been observed to contain bacteria and flagellates inside food vacuoles A minutum can ingest cyanobacteria A catenella can ingest heterotrophic bacteria and cyanobacteria A tamarense ingests haptophytes cryptophytes small diatoms and Heterosigma akashiwo A tamarense has also been observed eating other dinoflagellates such as Amphidinium carterae and Prorocentrum minimum Blooms can be terminated because of cell lysis infection from viruses and or bacteria parasites and encystment Both heterotrophic and mixotrophic dinoflagellates feed on Alexandrium as does the ciliate Favella Amoebophrya a parasitic dinoflagellate and Parvilucifera a perkinsozoan flagellate are known to infect Alexandrium species Specifically Parvilucifer infects the mobile zygote and pellicle cyst of A minutum 15 Morphology and anatomy editAlexandrium has a typical dinoflagellate morphology with the episome cingulum hyposome and sulcus It has two flagella a transverse flagellum around the cingulum groove called the girdle and the longitudinal flagellum that extends outwards from the sulcal groove It has an ornamented theca The morphology of Alexandrium is variable but the genus Alexandrium can be separated from Gessnerium by having the 1 plate directly or indirectly connected to the extreme anterior plate Po 4 Generally the Po is large and oval The Po has a cavity called the aperture which is mostly comma shaped There are many small pores on the outside of the comma and the apical plates Species that produce chains have secondary pores that are located most of the time dorsally on the comma 4 These pores are not found in the cingular and sulcal plates Life cycle editAlexandrium has a zygotic lifecycle In the vegetative phase the species are haploid and under certain circumstances related to stress the vegetative cells can transform into non motile pellicle cysts with a thin cell wall 3 The vegetative phase and pellicle cyst stage are very flexible and Alexandrium species can often switch back to vegetative cells when the stress has been removed or decreased 3 In the vegetative phase cells divide through desmoschisis each daughter cell retains half the thecal plates of the mother Some species such as A taylorii and A hiranoi can produce non motile dividing cysts that have the ability to divide where the formation of these cysts are restricted to the dark phase and germination in the light phase 15 The triggering of pellicle cyst formation is often due to turbulence presence of parasites and or passage through the gut of grazers Thus one of the defense mechanisms that Alexandrium deploys against parasites is by becoming pellicle cysts which makes them more resistant to parasitic infection Some species have evolved forming chains to give them an advantage It is suggested that forming chains is in response to high turbulence to swimming faster than single cells allowing them to migrate farther or deeper and a defense mechanism for reducing grazing 15 During the sexual phase the vegetative cells can form gametes that conjugate resulting in what is called a diploid planozygote that can transform into a resting cyst called a hypnozygote In some species the planozygote can go through meiosis and produce a vegetative cell The gametes can recognize each other by the help of agglutinin like compounds and the gametes can then fuse on their ventral side producing a biflagellated diploid planozygote The gametes of Alexandrium are the same as vegetative cells or they can be smaller in size 15 The time the hypnozygote spends in the sediment is most likely related to the specific species and or environmental factors Temperature changes have also been shown to produce varying amounts of cysts In the case of A tamarense specific bacteria may inhibit or trigger cyst production In colder temperatures the maturation length may be prolonged The bloom of some species is seasonally driven or the bloom can be regulated by environmental forces e g temperature in addition to being seasonally driven Under the right conditions the hypnozygote germinates and releases a motile cell called a planomeiocyte The sexual cycle is complete once the planomeiocyte divides and produces vegetative cells again 15 Genetics editThe cell cycle is composed of the typical eukaryotic stages in M1 S Phase G1 and G2 It goes through a light dark dependent manner During the night the cells are haploid and have only one copy of the DNA During the day the population is in S phase with two copies of DNA They go through closed mitosis G2 to M phase is regulated by nutrient factors while the S phase is controlled through light dark timing Alexandrium species must be of proper size before then can enter S and G2 phase Alexandrium fundyense increases greatly in size during the G2 M phase and after mitosis it decreases in size Other species can produce DNA through the entirety of the cell cycle Thus researchers have said that going through G1 is light dependent and going through S phase is size dependent 16 17 The specific toxins produced are regulated by the nuclear genes The genome mass is upwards of 200 pg DNA It has up to 150 chromosomes that have permanently condensed chromatin Both the plastid genome and the mitochondrial genome are typical of normal dinoflagellates For example in the case of plastid genomes the number of plastid genes have reduced because they have become nuclear encoded instead In A tamarense researchers have identified 48 non minicircle encoded photosystem genes which are found in the nuclear genome 15 genes that are supposed to be found in the plastid genome have become nuclear encoded instead in A tamarense Hence the plastid genome has been reduced to 15 single gene minicircles The mitochondrial genome is also greatly reduced to only having cob cox1 and cox3 protein coding genes 18 They also have lost the complex 1 oxidative phosphorylation genes and A tamarense has replaced it with NADH dehydrogenase 2 NDH 2 19 In the case of A catenella translation of the mitochondrial genome does not require initiation and termination codons 20 Fossil record editAlthough Alexandrium does not fossilize very well The resting cysts can fossilize somewhat Some researchers have hypothetically calculated that the average age of Alexandrium is 77 million years old which is going back to the Cretaceous period What allowed Alexandrium to increase greatly was the mass extinction in the Cretaceous period 65 MYA and the great increase in temperature of the sea in the Paleocene Era 55 MYA These two events reduced Alexandrium competitors and also made it more favorable for it to increase in size The rise of the isthmus of Panama that happened between 3 13 MYA subdivided and separated many species into distinct geographical populations This had profound effect on the Alexandrium tamarense species complex In the present day their population is much smaller than what was before 21 Practical importance editAlexandrium produces a variety of toxic derivatives The first group of toxins it produces includes carbomoyltoxins saxitoxin STX neosaxitoxin NEO and C 11 O sulfated analogues gonyautoxins GTX1 GTX4 The other group of toxins made is the N 21 sulfocarbamoyl analogues B1 GTX5 B2 GTX6 C1 C4 Toxin production seems to be genetically specific in the different Alexandrium species but the cell toxin content is much more variable and thus not a very good molecular marker for phylogeny However it seems that with distinct geographical locations there may be differences in the PSP toxin composition of Alexandrium species or even strains There may be selective forces that favour certain cysts with particular toxin composition 15 PSP toxin is produced in the G1 phase of the cell cycle and spirolides are produced in the G2 phase of the cell cycle Specific polyketide PKS genes are involved in spirolide biosynthesis Spirolide is composed of acetate with an imine moiety The Saxitoxin pathway is generally the same in dinoflagellates and cyanobacteria but the transcripts of the dinoflagellates occur in multiple copies meaning it is monocistronic and have splice leader sequences Lytic allelochemicals target external cell membranes of other protists In particular lytic compounds in A tamarense can increase the permeability of Ca2 ions in other protist cell membranes Waterborne cues from copepods can upregulate PSP toxin content in Alexandrium and differentially regulate genes by regulating the serine threonine kinase signalling transduction pathway 15 Alexandrium blooms cause PSP poisoning in bivalve molluscs but they can also cause damage to fish farms resulting large losses local or large businesses Many salmon are affected every year in Canada because of Alexandrium blooms A catenella can cause low gill viability A catenella causes tissue damage in gills by primarily producing reactive oxygen species or ROS 22 References edit Murray S A John Uwe Kremp Anke 2015 Alexandrium spp genetic and ecological factors influencing saxitoxin production and proliferation Climate Change and Marine and Freshwater Toxins 123 139 Anderson D M Alpermann T J Cembella A D Collos Y Masseret E Montresor M 2012 The globally distributed genus Alexandrium Multifaceted roles in marine ecosystems and impacts on human health Harmful Algae 14 2012 10 35 https dx doi org 10 1016 j hal 2011 10 012 Halim Y 1960 Alexandrium minutum n gen n sp dinoflagelle provocant des eaux rouges Vie et Milieu 11 102 105 a b c Balech Enrique 1995 The Genus Alexandrium Halim Dinoflagellata Sherkin Island Marine Station Sherkin Island Co Cork Ireland Lebour M V 1925 The dinoflagellates of northern seas Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Plymouth p i vi 1 250 35 pl Whedon W F Kofoid C A 1936 Dinoflagellata of the San Francisco region I On the skeletal morphology of two species Gonyaulax catenella and G acatenella University of California Publications in Zoology 41 4 25 34 Gaarder K R 1954a Dinoflagellates from the Michael Sars North Atlantic Deep Sea Expedition 1910 Report on the Scientific Results of the Michael Sars North Atlant Deep Sea Exped 1910 University of Bergen John Grieg Bergen 2 3 1 62 Tabl 1 5 Gallacher S Smith E A 1999 Bacteria and Paralytic Shellfish Toxins Protist 150 245 255 https dx doi org 10 1016 S1434 4610 99 70027 1 Gu H Zeng N Liu T Yang W Muller A Krock B 2013 Morphology toxicity and phylogeny of Alexandrium Dinophyceae species along the coast of China Harmful Algae 27 2013 68 81 https dx doi org 10 1016 j hal 2013 05 008 a b c Lilly E L Halanych K M and Anderson D M 2005 Phylogeny biogeography and species boundaries within the Alexandrium minutum group Harmful Algae 4 2005 1004 1020 doi 10 1016 j hal 2005 02 001 Scholin C A Hallegraff G M Anderson D M 1995 Molecular evolution of the Alexandrium tamarense species complex Dinophyceae dispersal in the North American and West Pacific regions Phycologia 34 6 472 485 10 2216 i0031 8884 34 6 472 1 John U Litaker R W Montresor M Murray S Brosnahan M L and Anderson D M 2014 Formal Revision of the Alexandrium tamarense Species Complex Dinophyceae Taxonomy The introduction of Five Species with Emphasis on Molecular based rDNA Classification Protist 165 779 804 https dx doi org 10 1016 j protis 2014 10 001 Gomez F Artigas L F 2019 Redefinition of the dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium based on Centrodinium Reinstatement of Gessnerium and Protogonyaulax and Episemicolon gen nov Hindawi Journal of Marine Biology 1284104 Mertens K N Adachi M Anderson D M Band Schmidt C Bravo I Brosnahan M L Bolch C J Calado A J Carbonell Moore M C Chomerat N Elbrachter M Figueroa R I Fraga S Garate Lizarraga I Garces E Gu H Hallegraeff G Hess P Hoppenrath M Horiguchi T Iwataki M John U Kremp A Larsen J Leaw C P Li Z Lim P T Litaker W MacKenzie L Masseret E Matsuoka K Moestrup O Montresor M Nagai S Nezan E Nishimura T Okolodkov Y B Orlova T Y Rene A Sampedro N Satta C T Shin H H Siano R Smith K F Steidinger K Takano Y Tillmann U Wolny J Yamaguchi A Murray S 2020 Morphological and phylogenetic data do not support the split of Alexandrium into four genera Harmful Algae 98 101902 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Anderson D M 1997 Bloom dynamics of toxic Alexandrium species in the northeastern U S Limnol Oceanogr 42 5 1009 1022 10 4319 lo 1997 42 5 part 2 1009 Aroncher Oldenburg Gaspar Kulis D M Anderson D M 1997 Toxin variability during the cell cycle of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense Limnol Oceanogr 42 5 1178 1188 10 4319 lo 1997 42 5 part 2 1178 Dapena C Bravo I Cuadrado A Figueroa R L 2015 Nuclear and Cell Morphological Changes during the Cell Cycle and Growth of the Toxic Dinoflagellate Alexandrium Protist 166 144 160 10 1016 j protis 2015 01 001 Wisecaver J H Broshahan M L Hackett J D 2013 Horizontal Gene Transfer is a Significant Driver of Gene Innovation in Dinoflagellates Genome Biol Evol 5 12 2368 2381 doi 10 1093 gbe evt179 Hackett J D Yoon H S Bento Soares M Bonaldo M F Casavant T L Scheetz T E Nosenko T Bhattacharya D 2004 Migration of the plastid genome to the nucleus in a peridinin dinoflagellate Current Biology 14 3 213 318 10 1016 S0960 9822 04 00042 9 Kamikawa R Nishimura H Sako Y 2009 Analysis of the mitochondrial genome transcripts and electron transport activity in the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella Gonyaulacales Dinophyceae Phycological Research 57 1 1 11 doi 10 1111 j 1440 1835 2008 00511 x John U Fensome R A Medlin L K 2003 The Application of a Molecular Clock Based on Molecular Sequences and the Fossil Record to Explain Biogeographic Distributions Within the Alexandrium tamarense Species Complex Dinophyceae Mol Biol Evol 20 7 1015 1027 10 1093 molbev msg105 Mardones J I Dorantes Aranda J J Nichols P D Hallegraeff G 2015 Fish gill damage by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella from Chilean fjords Synergistic action of ROS and PUFA Harmful Algae 49 40 49 10 1016 j hal 2015 09 001External links editAnderson lab Harmful Algae Harmful Algal Bloom HAB Associated Illness Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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