The Florida red tide is a descriptive name for high concentrations of the harmful marine alga,
Karenia brevis. Although most prevalent along the south-west Florida coast, periodic blooms have occurred throughout the entire US and Mexico
Gulf coasts and the Atlantic coast to North Carolina. This dinoflagellate produces a suite of polyether neurotoxins, called
brevetoxins, that cause severe impacts to natural resources, as well as public health. These naturally produced biotoxins
may represent one of the most common chemical stressors impacting South Florida coastal and marine ecosystems. Impacts include
massive fish kills, marine mammal, sea turtle and sea bird mortalities, benthic community die-off and public health effects
from shellfish contamination and inhalation of air-borne toxins. The primary mode of action is binding to voltage-gated sodium
channels causing depolarization of nerve cells, thus interfering with nerve transmission. Other effects include immune depression,
bronchial constriction and haemolysis. Parent algal toxins are synthesized within the unicellular organism, others are produced
as metabolic products. Recent studies into the composition of brevetoxins in cells, water, air and organisms have shown PbTx-2
to be the primary intracellular brevetoxin that is converted over time to PbTx-3 when the cells are ruptured, releasing extracellular
brevetoxins into the environment. Brevetoxins become aerosolized by bubble-mediated transport of extracellular toxins, the
composition of which varies depending on the composition in the source water. Bivalved molluscs rapidly accumulate brevetoxins
as they filter feed on
K. brevis cells. However, the parent algal toxins are rapidly metabolized to other compounds, some of which are responsible for neurotoxic
shellfish poisoning (NSP). These results provide new insight into the distribution, persistence and impacts of red tide toxins
to south-west Florida ecosystems.
Keywords Brevetoxins - Biotoxins - PbTx - HABs - Florida red tide