Co-occurrence of non-toxic (Cyanopeptolin) and toxic (Microcystin) peptides in a bloom of Microcystis sp. fuom a Chilean lake

Neumann U.; Weckesser, J; Campos V.; Cantarero, S; Urrutia, H; Heinze, R; Erhard, M

Keywords: performance, water, inhibition, chromatography, enzyme, chile, glutathione, lake, eutrophication, bacteria, cyanobacteria, assay, protein, liquid, mass, bacterial, variation, phase, cyanopeptolin, laser, toxin, toxins, proteinase, drug, article, kinase, fresh, spectrometry, phosphatase, microbiology, elastase, trypsin, phosphoprotein, papain, determination, microcystis, sp., seasonal, 1, microcystins, priority, cyclic, (microorganisms), nonhuman, journal, Peptides,, serine, High, Immunosorbent, Spectrometry,, unclassified, cyanoginosin, transferase, linked, Reversed, plasmin, Mass,, Matrix-Assisted, Desorption-Ionization

Abstract

A cyanobacterial bloom occurring in 1998 in lake Tres Pascualas (Concepcion/Chile) was found to be dominated by Microcystis sp. The bloom contained both non-toxic (cyanopeptolin-type) and hepatotoxic (microcystin-type) peptides. Cyanopeptolin structure of the non-toxic peptides (called cyanopeptolin VW-1 and VW-2, respectively) was revealed by matrix assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) of whole cells, showing dominant molecular ions at m/z = 975 and m/z 995, respectively. On post source decay (PSD), both cyanopeptolins showed fragments deriving from Ahp-Phe-MTyr (3-amino-6-hydroxy-2-piperidone), the characteristic partial structure of cyanopeptolins. The amounts of each of the two cyanopeptolins could only roughly be estimated to be > 0.1% of bloom material dry weight. In addition the blooms contained microcystins (20 ?g/g bloom dry weight as determined by RP-HPLC, 13 ?g/g according to ELISA determination). MALDI-TOF-MS revealed several structural variants of microcystin: MCYST-RR (microcystin with Arg and Arg, indicated by m/z 1038 and confirmed by PSD revealing a m/z = 135 fragment deriving from the Adda side chain, MCYST-FR (microcystin with Phe and Arg, indicated by m/z = 1015). The presence of [Asp((3))]-MCYST-LR (microcystin with Leu and Arg, Asp non-methylated, indicated by m/z 981), and [Asp((3))]-MCYST-YR (microcystin with Tyr and Arg, Asp non-methylated, indicated by m/z 1031) were likely. The relative amounts of the peptides varied between February, April, and May. Whole cell extracts from the bloom material revealed specific enzyme inhibitory activities. The serin-proteases trypsin, plasmin, elastase were inhibited, assumable due to the cyanopeptolins found. Elastase and the cysteine-protease papain were not inhibited, inhibitions of protein kinase and glutathione S-transferase (GST) were low. Strong inhibition was observed with protein-phosphatase-1, likely due to the microcystins present in the samples.

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Título según SCOPUS: Co-occurrence of non-toxic (Cyanopeptolin) and toxic (Microcystin) peptides in a bloom of Microcystis sp. fuom a Chilean lake
Título de la Revista: SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volumen: 23
Número: 2
Editorial: Elsevier GmbH
Fecha de publicación: 2000
Página de inicio: 191
Página final: 197
Idioma: English
URL: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0033924249&partnerID=q2rCbXpz
Notas: SCOPUS