Understanding the toxicity and production rates of the various secondary metabolites produced by and cohabitating benthic dinoflagellates is essential to unravelling the complexities associated with ciguatera poisoning. In the present study, a sulphated cyclic polyether, gambierone, was purified from CAWD232 and its acute toxicity was determined using intraperitoneal injection into mice. It was shown to be of low toxicity with an LD of 2.4 mg/kg, 9600 times less toxic than the commonly implicated Pacific ciguatoxin-1B, indicating it is unlikely to play a role in ciguatera poisoning. In addition, the production of gambierone and 44-methylgambierone was assessed from 20 isolates of ten , two and two species using quantitative liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Gambierone was produced by seven species, ranging from 1 to 87 pg/cell, and one species from each of the genera and , ranging from 2 to 17 pg/cell. The production of 44-methylgambierone ranged from 5 to 270 pg/cell and was ubiquitous to all species tested, as well as both species of and . The relative production ratio of these two secondary metabolites revealed that only two species produced more gambierone, CAWD237 and CAWD232. This represents the first report of gambierone acute toxicity and production by these cohabitating benthic dinoflagellate species. While these results demonstrate that gambierones are unlikely to pose a risk to human health, further research is required to understand if they bioaccumulate in the marine food web.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8147941PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins13050333DOI Listing

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