4.4 Article

A cylindrospermopsin-producing cyanobacterium isolated from a microbial mat in the Baltic Sea

Journal

TOXICON
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107205

Keywords

Benthic cyanobacteria; Cylindrospermopsin; Baltic sea; Genome; Brackish water; Gas vesicle

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This study reports the isolation of a harmful cyanobacterium (Kamptonema sp. UHCC 0994) from a benthic microbial mat collected in shallow water on the coast of Helsinki. Genome sequencing analysis revealed similarities between this harmful cyanobacterial strain and strains isolated from the Baltic Sea, all of which contain the biosynthetic genes for the production of the harmful compound cylindrospermopsin. These findings suggest that these toxic cyanobacteria may exhibit a tychoplanktic lifestyle in the Baltic Sea and could be a potential source of environmental toxins.
Toxic benthic mats of cyanobacteria are associated with water quality problems and animal poisonings around the world. A strain of the filamentous cyanobacterial genus Kamptonema was isolated from a water bloom in the Baltic Sea four decades ago and later shown to produce cylindrospermopsins. However, the exact habitat of this strain remains unclear and cylindrospermopsins have not yet been reported from water blooms in the Baltic Sea. Here, we report the isolation of Kamptonema sp. UHCC 0994 from a benthic microbial mat collected in shallow water on the coast of Helsinki. We obtained draft genome sequences for the Kamptonema spp. PCC 7926 and UHCC 0994 strains that were isolated from the Baltic Sea. These genomes were 90-96% similar to previously studied Kamptonema sp. PCC 6506 and Kamptonema formosum PCC 6407, which were isolated from benthic and North American freshwater environments, respectively. The genomes of all four Kamptonema strains encode complete cylindrospermopsin biosynthetic gene clusters. We detected the production of cylindrospermopsin and 7-epi-cylindrospermopsin in the four Kamptonema strains using high-resolution liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. The four strains encode genes for producing gas vesicles distributed in two to three different regions of their genomes. Kamptonema spp. UHCC 0994 and PCC 7926 have both retained the ability to regulate their buoyancy when grown in liquid culture. Together this suggests that these toxic cyanobacteria may exhibit a tychoplanktic lifestyle in the Baltic Sea. This study suggests that microbial mats containing cyanobacteria could be a source of environmental toxins in the Baltic Sea.

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