11 results match your criteria: "600 Clinic Drive[Affiliation]"

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

Tetrahedron

August 2024

Biotoxin Metrology, National Research Council, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS, B3H 3Z1 Canada.

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 and isolated from benthic algal samples collected in waters south St.

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3-Epimers of Caribbean ciguatoxins in fish and algae.

Toxicon

January 2024

Biotoxin Metrology, National Research Council Canada, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS, B3H 3Z1, Canada.

Article Synopsis
  • Ciguatera poisoning (CP) is linked to consuming fish contaminated with ciguatoxins (CTXs) and is common in subtropical and tropical regions.
  • Recent research discovered Caribbean CTXs (C-CTXs), specifically C-CTX5, which can be reduced to C-CTX1, revealing complexities in chemical reductions that produce various stereoisomers.
  • A study using LC-HRMS helped identify these diastereoisomers in contaminated fish tissues, suggesting variability in their formation and leading to the proposal of a new naming convention for better identification of CTX analogues.
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Article Synopsis
  • Tropical dinoflagellates produce toxins like ciguatoxins and gambierones, which can contaminate fish and cause ciguatera poisoning in humans.
  • While many studies focus on the cellular toxicity of these dinoflagellates, few have investigated the extracellular toxins that might enter the food web through unexpected routes.
  • This study found that media extracts from a specific dinoflagellate strain exhibited bioactivity and contained potential toxins, highlighting extracellular toxin pools as a significant factor in the ecology of ciguatera poisoning.
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Algal ciguatoxin identified as source of ciguatera poisoning in the Caribbean.

Chemosphere

July 2023

School of Marine & Environmental Sciences, University of South Alabama, 600 Clinic Drive, AL, 36688, USA; Marine Ecotoxicology Group, Dauphin Island Sea Lab, 101 Bienville Blvd, Dauphin Island, Dauphin Island, AL, 36528, USA. Electronic address:

Ciguatera poisoning (CP) is a severe seafood-borne disease, caused by the consumption of reef fish contaminated with Caribbean ciguatoxins (C-CTXs) in the Caribbean and tropical Atlantic. However, C-CTXs have not been identified from their presumed algal source, so the relationship to the CTXs in fish causing illness remains unknown. This has hindered the development of detection methods, diagnostics, monitoring programs, and limited fundamental knowledge on the environmental factors that regulate C-CTX production.

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Selective and Efficient Capture and Release of -Diol-Containing Pacific and Caribbean Ciguatoxins from Fish Extracts with a Boronate Affinity Polymer.

J Agric Food Chem

October 2022

Biotoxin Metrology, National Research Council Canada, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3Z1, Canada.

Ciguatera poisoning can occur following the consumption of fish contaminated with trace levels of ciguatoxins (CTXs). These trace levels represent an analytical challenge for confirmation by LC-MS due to matrix interferences and the high instrument sensitivity required. Sample preparation procedures are laborious and require extensive cleanup procedures to address these issues.

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Ciguatera poisoning is a global health concern caused by the consumption of seafood containing ciguatoxins (CTXs). Detection of CTXs poses significant analytical challenges due to their low abundance even in highly toxic fish, the diverse and in-part unclarified structures of many CTX congeners, and the lack of reference standards. Selective detection of CTXs requires methods such as liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) or high-resolution MS (LC-HRMS).

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Production and stability of Oxygen-18 labeled Caribbean ciguatoxins and gambierones.

Toxicon

May 2022

Biotoxin Metrology, National Research Council, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS, B3H 2Z1, Canada.

Ciguatoxins (CTXs) and gambierones are ladder-shaped polyethers associated with ciguatera poisoning and Gambierdiscus spp. Several of these compounds contain carbonyl or hemiketal groups, which have the potential to exchange with O-labeled water under acidic conditions. The effects of solvent composition and acid on the rate of exchange and on the stability of the labels at various pH values were assessed to optimize the incorporation of O into Caribbean ciguatoxin-1 and -2 (C-CTX1/2), gambierone, and 44-methylgambierone.

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Cancer health disparities (CHDs), defined as the adverse differences in cancer incidence and mortality, are prevalent in certain racial and ethnic groups. Underlying causes of CHDs are multi-factorial and debatable. While low socioeconomic status, geographical location, lifestyle and behavioral factors are mostly believed to contribute to CHDs, regardless of ethnic and racial background, significant data now also exist to support a genetic basis of such disparities as well.

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Chemotherapy-induced immunosuppression poses an additional challenge to its limited efficacy in pancreatic cancer (PC). Here we investigated the effect of gemcitabine on macrophages, which are the first line of immune-defense mechanisms. We observed an increased presence of macrophages in orthotopic human pancreatic tumor xenografts from mice treated with gemcitabine as compared to those from vehicle only-treated mice.

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Racial health disparities in ovarian cancer: not just black and white.

J Ovarian Res

September 2017

Department of Oncologic Sciences, Mitchell Cancer Institute, University of South Alabama, 1660 Springhill Avenue, Mobile, AL, 36604-1405, USA.

Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynecological malignancy, which disproportionately affects African American (AA) women. Lack of awareness and socioeconomic factors are considered important players in OC racial health disparity, while at the same time, some recent studies have brought focus on the genetic basis of disparity as well. Differential polymorphisms, mutations and expressions of genes have been reported in OC patients of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds.

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Although increased awareness leading to early detection and prevention, as well as advancements in treatment strategies, have resulted in superior clinical outcomes, African American women with breast cancer continue to have greater mortality rates, compared to Caucasian American counterparts. Moreover, African American women are more likely to have breast cancer at a younger age and be diagnosed with aggressive tumor sub-types. Such racial disparities can be attributed to socioeconomic differences, but it is increasingly being recognized that these disparities may indeed be due to certain genetic and other non-genetic biological differences.

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