Tosteson T R
Department of Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico 00731.
P R Health Sci J. 1995 Jun;14(2):117-29.
The source of the diversity of phytotoxins found in the marine food web is not well understood. It is not clear what roles these secondary metabolites might have in the phytoplankton that produce them. The phytotoxins do not appear to be deterrents of predation, although the production of antibiotics by marine macroalgae might be considered in this light (86). It is equally doubtful that the production and/or presence of these toxins confers a selective advantage on the phytoplankton producers, when in fact the diversity of naturally occurring phytoplankton species may well be maintained by lytic viral infections (22,64). On the other hand, these multiple, diverse toxins may be the products of the different adaptations and interactions that take place between microalgal vectors and the highly variable spectrum of their microbial symbionts. We do not know what selective signals these toxic products may be providing in the maintenance of the symbiont-host consortia in which they are produced, however, their diversity most likely reflects the diversity of symbiotic interactions that exist in these consortia. Woven into the very fabric of the traditional marine food web is an invisible empire of marine micro-organisms, that by its very existence may determine the intense diversity of toxins found in marine biota. Marine bacteria are very likely the most abundant organisms in the sea and to a large degree maintain a food web of their own, often referred to as the microbial loop (64). This microbial web sustains the biogeochemical cycles in the sea. Much of the food produced by phytoplankton and cyanobacteria is consumed by bacteria in the microbial loop and may never enter the food web of larger invertebrates and fishes. Traditionally, the marine food web has been viewed, so to speak, from the top, however, it is now clear that there is an enormous marine microbial food web from which the food web of larger invertebrates and fishes emanates (Figure 13). In many respects the phytotoxins are biomarkers of the interactions between these two food webs. In their very diversity these toxins reflect an amalgam of interacting collaborating forms of life, a complex of phytoplankton hosts and their microbial symbionts producing multiple toxins and their derivatives that ultimately result in the complex medical symptoms they produce in human consumers of poisoned seafood. The term ciguatera has been employed to describe the syndrome of the illness contracted by persons who have eaten tropical and semitropical finfish poisoned by ciguatoxin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
海洋食物网中发现的植物毒素多样性的来源尚未得到很好的理解。目前尚不清楚这些次生代谢产物在产生它们的浮游植物中可能发挥什么作用。植物毒素似乎并不是捕食的威慑物,不过从这个角度来看,海洋大型藻类产生抗生素的情况或许可以考虑在内(86)。同样令人怀疑的是,这些毒素的产生和/或存在是否赋予浮游植物生产者选择优势,而实际上,天然浮游植物物种的多样性很可能是由溶解性病毒感染维持的(22,64)。另一方面,这些多样的毒素可能是微藻载体与其高度可变的微生物共生体之间不同适应和相互作用的产物。然而,我们不知道这些有毒产物在维持其产生的共生体 - 宿主聚集体方面可能提供什么选择信号,它们的多样性很可能反映了这些聚集体中存在的共生相互作用的多样性。编织在传统海洋食物网结构中的是一个无形的海洋微生物帝国,其存在本身可能决定了海洋生物群中发现的毒素的高度多样性。海洋细菌很可能是海洋中数量最多的生物,在很大程度上维持着它们自己的食物网,通常被称为微生物环(64)。这个微生物网维持着海洋中的生物地球化学循环。浮游植物和蓝细菌产生的大部分食物被微生物环中的细菌消耗,可能永远不会进入较大无脊椎动物和鱼类的食物网。传统上,海洋食物网可以说是从顶部来看的,然而,现在很清楚的是,存在一个巨大的海洋微生物食物网,较大无脊椎动物和鱼类的食物网由此产生(图13)。在许多方面,植物毒素是这两个食物网之间相互作用的生物标志物。这些毒素的多样性反映了相互作用、协作的生命形式的混合体,是浮游植物宿主及其微生物共生体的复合体,它们产生多种毒素及其衍生物,最终导致食用中毒海鲜的人类消费者出现复杂的医学症状。“雪卡毒素中毒”一词已被用于描述食用受雪卡毒素污染的热带和亚热带鳍鱼的人所患疾病的综合征。(摘要截选至400字)