A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.

The cyanobacterial neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) has been considered a serious health threat because of its putative role in multiple neurodegenerative diseases. First reports on BMAA concentrations in cyanobacteria were alarming: nearly all cyanobacteria were assumed to contain high B...

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Main Authors: Elisabeth J Faassen, Frits Gillissen, Miquel Lürling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3343013?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-287cb8fbde834328a0076bc9246608182020-11-25T02:03:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0175e3666710.1371/journal.pone.0036667A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.Elisabeth J FaassenFrits GillissenMiquel LürlingThe cyanobacterial neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) has been considered a serious health threat because of its putative role in multiple neurodegenerative diseases. First reports on BMAA concentrations in cyanobacteria were alarming: nearly all cyanobacteria were assumed to contain high BMAA concentrations, implying ubiquitous exposure. Recent studies however question this presence of high BMAA concentrations in cyanobacteria. To assess the real risk of BMAA to human health, this discrepancy must be resolved. We therefore tested whether the differences found could be caused by the analytical methods used in different studies. Eight cyanobacterial samples and two control samples were analyzed by three commonly used methods: HPLC-FLD analysis and LC-MS/MS analysis of both derivatized and underivatized samples. In line with published results, HPLC-FLD detected relatively high BMAA concentrations in some cyanobacterial samples, while both LC-MS/MS methods only detected BMAA in the positive control (cycad seed sarcotesta). Because we could eliminate the use of different samples and treatments as causal factors, we demonstrate that the observed differences were caused by the analytical methods. We conclude that HPLC-FLD overestimated BMAA concentrations in some cyanobacterial samples due to its low selectivity and propose that BMAA might be present in (some) cyanobacteria, but in the low µg/g or ng/g range instead of the high µg/g range as sometimes reported before. We therefore recommend to use only selective and sensitive analytical methods like LC-MS/MS for BMAA analysis. Although possibly present in low concentrations in cyanobacteria, BMAA can still form a health risk. Recent evidence on BMAA accumulation in aquatic food chains suggests human exposure through consumption of fish and shellfish which expectedly exceeds exposure through cyanobacteria.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3343013?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisabeth J Faassen
Frits Gillissen
Miquel Lürling
spellingShingle Elisabeth J Faassen
Frits Gillissen
Miquel Lürling
A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elisabeth J Faassen
Frits Gillissen
Miquel Lürling
author_sort Elisabeth J Faassen
title A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
title_short A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
title_full A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
title_fullStr A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin BMAA in cyanobacteria.
title_sort comparative study on three analytical methods for the determination of the neurotoxin bmaa in cyanobacteria.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The cyanobacterial neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) has been considered a serious health threat because of its putative role in multiple neurodegenerative diseases. First reports on BMAA concentrations in cyanobacteria were alarming: nearly all cyanobacteria were assumed to contain high BMAA concentrations, implying ubiquitous exposure. Recent studies however question this presence of high BMAA concentrations in cyanobacteria. To assess the real risk of BMAA to human health, this discrepancy must be resolved. We therefore tested whether the differences found could be caused by the analytical methods used in different studies. Eight cyanobacterial samples and two control samples were analyzed by three commonly used methods: HPLC-FLD analysis and LC-MS/MS analysis of both derivatized and underivatized samples. In line with published results, HPLC-FLD detected relatively high BMAA concentrations in some cyanobacterial samples, while both LC-MS/MS methods only detected BMAA in the positive control (cycad seed sarcotesta). Because we could eliminate the use of different samples and treatments as causal factors, we demonstrate that the observed differences were caused by the analytical methods. We conclude that HPLC-FLD overestimated BMAA concentrations in some cyanobacterial samples due to its low selectivity and propose that BMAA might be present in (some) cyanobacteria, but in the low µg/g or ng/g range instead of the high µg/g range as sometimes reported before. We therefore recommend to use only selective and sensitive analytical methods like LC-MS/MS for BMAA analysis. Although possibly present in low concentrations in cyanobacteria, BMAA can still form a health risk. Recent evidence on BMAA accumulation in aquatic food chains suggests human exposure through consumption of fish and shellfish which expectedly exceeds exposure through cyanobacteria.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3343013?pdf=render
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