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Identification of potentially toxic environmental Microcystis by individual and multiple PCR amplification of specific microcystin synthetase gene regions
Author(s) -
Ouahid Youness,
PérezSilva Gonzalo,
Campo Francisca F. del
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
environmental toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.813
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1522-7278
pISSN - 1520-4081
DOI - 10.1002/tox.20103
Subject(s) - microcystin , microcystis , biology , gene , cyanobacteria , primer (cosmetics) , nonribosomal peptide , amplicon , cyanotoxin , polymerase chain reaction , polyketide synthase , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , polyketide , chemistry , bacteria , biosynthesis , organic chemistry
Reliable cyanotoxin monitoring in water reservoirs is difficult because of, among other reasons, unpredictable changes in cyanobacteria biomass, toxin production, and inadequate sampling frequency. Therefore, it would be useful to identify potentially microcystin‐producing strains of cyanobacterial populations in field samples. With this aim, we developed a methodology to distinguish microcystin‐producing from non‐producing Microcystis strains by amplifying six characteristic segments of the microcystin synthetase mcy cluster, three corresponding to the nonribosomal peptide synthetase, genes mcyA, mcyB, and mcyC , and three to the polyketide synthase, genes mcyD, mcyE, and mcyG . For this purpose five new primer sets were designed and tested using purified DNA, cultured cells, and field colonies as DNA sources. Simultaneous amplification of several genes in multipex PCR reactions was performed in this study. The results obtained showed that: (i) the expected specific amplicons were obtained with all microcystin‐producing strains but not with nonproducing strains; (ii) cells could be directly used as DNA templates, 2000 cells being a sufficient number in most cases; (iii) simultaneous amplification of several gene regions is feasible both with cultured cells and with field colonies. Our data support the idea that the presence of various mcy genes in Microcystis could be used as a criterion for ascribing potential toxigenicity to field strains, and the possibility of applying whole‐cell assays for the simultaneous amplification of various genes may contribute significantly to simplifying toxigenicity testing. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Environ Toxicol 20: 235–242, 2005.

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