2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2006.04.009
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Toxicity and toxin identification in Colomesus asellus, an Amazonian (Brazil) freshwater puffer fish

Abstract: Toxicity and toxin identification in Colomesus asellus, an Amazonian (Brazil) freshwater puffer fish. By using four different techniques--mouse bioassay, ELISA, HPLC and mass spectrometry-we evaluated the toxicity in the extracts of C. asellus, a freshwater puffer fish from the rivers of the Amazon, and identified for the first time the components responsible for its toxicity. The T20G10 monoclonal antibody raised against TTX, and employed in an indirect competitive enzyme immunoassay, showed very low affinity… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…was non-toxic, both in the rainy and dry seasons. As in the freshwater or brackish water species previously reported (Laobhripatr et al, 1990;Mahmud et al, 1999a, b;Lin et al, 2002;Panichpisal et al, 2003), the toxin localized mainly in the skin (Table 1), and the toxicity scores (4-37 MU/g) were comparable to those of the Bangladeshi freshwater pufferfishes T. cutcutia (2-20 MU/g) and C. patoca (2-40 MU/g) (Zaman et al, 1997), and the Brazilian freshwater species C. asellus (19-53 MU/g) (Oliveira et al, 2006). Because the minimal lethal dose (MLD) of PST in humans is estimated to be 3000 MU (Noguchi et al, 1997), the consumption of approximately 100 g of the skin or ovary (with a toxicity of approximately 30 MU/g) can be fatal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…was non-toxic, both in the rainy and dry seasons. As in the freshwater or brackish water species previously reported (Laobhripatr et al, 1990;Mahmud et al, 1999a, b;Lin et al, 2002;Panichpisal et al, 2003), the toxin localized mainly in the skin (Table 1), and the toxicity scores (4-37 MU/g) were comparable to those of the Bangladeshi freshwater pufferfishes T. cutcutia (2-20 MU/g) and C. patoca (2-40 MU/g) (Zaman et al, 1997), and the Brazilian freshwater species C. asellus (19-53 MU/g) (Oliveira et al, 2006). Because the minimal lethal dose (MLD) of PST in humans is estimated to be 3000 MU (Noguchi et al, 1997), the consumption of approximately 100 g of the skin or ovary (with a toxicity of approximately 30 MU/g) can be fatal.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…suvatii from Thailand, T. cutcutia, Chelonodon patoca from Bangladesh, and Colomesus asellus from Brazil are PSTs (Kungsuwan et al, 1997;Zaman et al, 1997Zaman et al, , 1998Oliveira et al, 2006). The presence of both TTX and PSTs within the same species is also documented for the Thailand freshwater pufferfish T. fangi (Saitanu et al, 1991;Sato et al, 1997), whereas palytoxin-like substance(s) in addition to PSTs are detected in the Bangladeshi specimens of Tetraodon sp.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In Florida's marine waters (USA), puffer fish have been confirmed to be a hazardous reservoir of STX 17 and this toxin was responsible for 28 poisoning cases between 2002 and 2004 8 . A study in Brazil identified saxitoxin and gonyautoxin as the components responsible for toxicity in Colomesus asellus, a freshwater puffer fish 23 . Without further studies to identify the toxins related to puffer fish poisonings, it is not possible to assume which toxin caused the symptoms of puffer fish poisoning in the regions of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the evidence of increased possible poisoning from consuming meat of the Sphoeroides genus, the spotted puffer fish 13,23 , the general public and fishermen have little knowledge about the puffer fish species. Therefore, based on our study, we do not recommend consumption, even in small amounts, of flesh and other tissues of puffer fish.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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