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Isolation of Caribbean Ciguatoxin-5 (C-CTX5) and confirmation of its structure by NMR spectroscopy.

Christopher O MilesIan W BurtonNancy I LewisAlison RobertsonSabrina D GiddingsPearse McCarronElizabeth M Mudge
Published in: Tetrahedron (2024)
Ciguatera poisoning occurs throughout subtropical and tropical regions globally. The Virgin Islands in the Caribbean Sea is a known hyperendemic region for ciguatera and has been associated with Caribbean ciguatoxin (C-CTX) contamination in fish. An algal C-CTX (C-CTX5) was identified in Gambierdiscus silvae and G. caribeaus isolated from benthic algal samples collected in waters south St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands. The highest CTX-producing isolate, G. silvae 1602 SH-6, was grown at large-scale to isolate sufficient C-CTX5 for structural confirmation by NMR spectroscopy. A series of orthogonal extraction and fractionation procedures resulted in purification of approximately 40 μg of C-CTX5, as estimated by quantitative NMR. A suite of 1D and 2D NMR experiments were acquired that verified the structure originally proposed for C-CTX5. The structural confirmation and successful isolation of C-CTX5 opens the way for work on the stability, toxicology and biotransformation of C-CTXs, as well as for the production of quantitative reference materials for analytical method development and validation. The strategies developed for purification of C-CTX5 may also apply to isolation and purification of CTXs from the Pacific Ocean and other regions.
Keyphrases
  • klebsiella pneumoniae
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • multidrug resistant
  • escherichia coli
  • climate change
  • mass spectrometry