Journal
MARINE DRUGS
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md21060320
Keywords
emergent toxins; seafood safety; occurrence data; European waters; LC-HRMS
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In a comprehensive project to understand emergent toxins in edible marine organisms, TTX analogues were detected in the soft tissues of European fiddler crabs and green crabs harvested in southern Portugal. No TTX was detected, but three TTX analogues were found. These results emphasize the need to monitor TTX and its analogues in edible marine species to protect consumers and provide information to the European Food Safety Authority.
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) and its analogues are naturally occurring toxins historically responsible for human poisoning fatalities in Eastern Asia. It is typically linked to the consumption of pufferfish and, to a lesser extent, marine gastropods and crabs. In the scope of a comprehensive project to understand the prevalence of emergent toxins in edible marine organisms, we report, for the first time, the detection of TTX analogues in the soft tissues of edible crabs, the European fiddler crab (Afruca tangeri) and green crab (Carcinus maenas), harvested in southern Portugal. No TTX was detected in the analyzed samples. However, three TTX analogues were detected-an unknown TTX epimer, deoxyTTX, and trideoxyTTX. These three analogues were found in the European fiddler crab while only trideoxyTTX was found in the green crab, suggesting that the accumulation of TTX analogues might be influenced by the crabs' different feeding ecology. These results highlight the need to widely monitor TTX and its analogues in edible marine species in order to provide adequate information to the European Food Safety Authority and to protect consumers.
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