
A powerful fish-killing toxin that has caused
major losses in commercial ponds of catfish, striped bass and tilapia may also
have cancer-killing properties. Click the image for more information about
it.
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Fish-Killing Toxin Could Kill Cancer Cells
By Sean Adams
September 8, 2009 A powerful fish-killing toxin could
have cancer-killing properties as well, according to collaborative research led
by Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
microbiologist
Paul V.
Zimba and chemist Peter Moeller of the U.S.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The toxin, called
euglenophycin, has a molecular structure similar to that of solenopsin, an
alkaloid from fire ant venom known to inhibit tumor development.
The findings were published online in July in the journal Toxicon.
In the summer of 2002, a commercial aquaculture facility in North Carolina
reported mysterious fish mortalities in its ponds. More than 21,000 striped
bass had died in July and August, resulting in losses of more than $100,000.
To find out why the fish had died, Zimba and Moeller collaborated with
Michigan State University biologist Richard
Triemer. Zimba works at the
ARS
Catfish Genetics Research Unit in Stoneville, Miss. The scientists isolated
and analyzed dissolved compounds, bacteria and algae from pond water samples.
In a 2004 paper in the Journal of Fish
Disease, they identified the culprits as Euglena sanguinea and
E. granulata, two species of freshwater algae that had generally been
considered benign.
It was the first report of freshwater algae causing fish kills, but it
wasn't the last instance of such an event. Zimba and his colleagues have
confirmed 11 additional occasions in which euglenoid algae have fatally
impacted fish ponds. Losses from these eventswhich have affected striped
bass, tilapia and channel catfishare estimated to exceed $1.1 million.
Moeller, working in NOAA's Center for
Human Health Risk in Charleston, S.C., then purified the active compounds
and fully characterized the molecular structure of euglenophycin, the algal
toxin responsible for the fish kills. The scientists are seeking patent
protection on the toxin, and are currently investigating its properties.
Laboratory tests have confirmed that euglenophycin is deadly to fish. Catfish
exposed to the purified form of the toxin died within 4 hours of exposure.
One potential use of the toxin is in treating cancer patients. Laboratory
tests have shown that even low concentrations of euglenophycin led to a
significant decrease in cancer cell growth, and can kill cancer cells. Future
tests will attempt to verify whether the toxin can slow or prevent tumor
formation. Positive results would indicate that this problematic alga could
have beneficial medical applications.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.
NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth's environment, from the
depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages the
United States coastal and marine resources.