During the summer and fall of 1984 and 1985, the eutrophic Lake Akersvatn in south-eastern Norway, used as reserve drinking water reservoir, was found to produce heavy water-blooms of the colonial blue-green alga Microcystis aeruginosa. Samples of the water-bloom were found to be toxic using the mouse bioassay. No toxin was found free in the water as detected by HPLC and mouse bioassay. The toxic cells (minimum lethal dose 8-15 mg/kg body weight in mice) and purified toxin (minimum lethal dose 50 µg/kg body weight in mice) showed signs of poisoning in laboratory rats and mice identical to that of other hepatotoxin-producing
Extracts from blue-green algal blooms (Microcystis aeruginosa and Oscillatoria agardhii) from different lakes in southeastern Norway were tested for toxicity toward freshly prepared rat hepatocytes. The toxicity effects were scored by means of morphological studies of the cells and by measuring leakage of the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from the cells. The results with the hepatocytes correspond well with results from the traditional mouse bioassay, concerning both ability to distinguish between toxic and nontoxic samples and estimation of relative toxicity. Morphological changes due to toxic effects on the plasma membrane appeared earlier than leakage of enzyme from damaged cells. The results indicate that the hepatocyte-toxicity assay system might be well suited for screening purposes concerning water contamination by blue-green algae.
The acute toxicity of extracts of blue-green algae was tested in freshly prepared rat hepatocytes in suspension. The results were compared with the traditional in vivo mouse bioassay. Sixty samples of natural algal blooms from freshwater lakes in Norway, Sweden, and Finland and 14 samples cultured in the laboratory were tested. The mouse bioassay revealed hepatotoxins in a large number of the algae, while neurotoxins were not found. Acute hepatotoxicity in vitro was scored by measurement of leakage of the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from damaged cells and of morphological changes of the cells. The correlation coefficients between mouse toxicity and LDH, mouse toxicity and morphological cell damage, and between LDH and morphological cell damage were 0.812, 0.735, and 0.882, respectively. Consequently, the rat hepatocyte toxicity test seems to be well suited for screening blooms of blue-green algae for the presence of hepatotoxins.
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