[Accumulation of tetrodotoxin from diet in two species of scavenging marine snails]

Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi. 2014;55(3):152-6. doi: 10.3358/shokueishi.55.152.
[Article in Japanese]

Abstract

A feeding experiment of TTX-containing diet was conducted using the small scavenging marine snails Pliarcularia globosa and Reticunassa festiva. Seventy-five specimens of each species were divided into 15 groups of 5 individuals, of which 3 groups were directly submitted, without feeding, to toxin quantification as described below. TTX was not detected. Each of the remaining 12 groups was accommodated in a plastic case (80×70×40 mm) filled with seawater, and fed for 24 hours with ovary tissue (0.1 g) of the pufferfish Takifugu vermicularis, whose TTX content had previously been determined. Then the seawater was exchanged for fresh seawater, the snails were reared for 4 days without feeding, and then the seawater was changed again. This feeding/rearing cycle (5 days) was repeated 8 times, and 3 groups were sampled every 2 cycles. The combined viscera and combined muscle of each group were each extracted with 0.1% aqueous acetic acid, and then TTX was quantified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. The estimated amount of ingested TTX was calculated by multiplying the difference between the amounts of ovary tissue supplied and remaining by the toxin content (122-126 MU/g). Similar mean values of 5.1 MU/group/cycle in P. globosa and 5.3 MU/group/cycle in R. festiva were obtained. Toxin content (TTX amount per gram of tissue) and toxin amount (TTX amount per group) during the experimental period were 0.23-2.85 MU/g and 0.05-0.96 MU/group, respectively, in P. globosa viscera. Both values increased markedly from the 2nd cycle to the 6th cycle. In contrast, no such increase in toxin content/amount was observed throughout the experimental period in P. globosa muscle (<0.05-0.86 MU/g, <0.02-0.27 MU/group), R. festiva viscera (<0.05-0.8 MU/g, <0.02-0.33 MU/group), and R. festiva muscle (<0.05-0.81 MU/g, <0.02-0.23 MU/group). The remaining ratio of TTX (percentage of total toxin amount [sum of the toxin amount of viscera and muscle] to estimated TTX ingestion amount) was less than 4% in P. globosa, and less than 2% in R. festiva after the 4th cycle, suggesting that the possibility that these two species would accumulate TTX at levels high enough to raise food hygiene issues is low.

Publication types

  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Diet*
  • Food Contamination / analysis
  • Food Safety
  • Fresh Water
  • Seawater
  • Snails / metabolism*
  • Snails / physiology*
  • Takifugu*
  • Tetrodotoxin / analysis
  • Tetrodotoxin / metabolism*

Substances

  • Tetrodotoxin