Many cyanobacteria make a neurotoxin.A brain-damaging toxin, once believed to come only from a group of tropical plants and their live-in microbes, turns out to be much more widespread. The discovery comes out of investigations into a long-standing medical mystery. During the last century, a neurological disease akin to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) (ā'mīətrōf`ik, sklĭrō`sĭs) or motor neuron disease, spiked among the Chamorro people in Guam. An international research team led by Paul Cox of the National Tropical Botanical Garden The National Tropical Botanical Garden is a not-for-profit non-governmental institution. The institution is made up of major programs in scientific research, conservation, and education, and four gardens and three preserves in Hawai based in Kalaheo, Hawaii, has suggested that the spike came from a rise in exposure to the neurotoxic neurotoxic pertaining to or emanating from a neurotoxin. neurotoxic state a case of poisoning by a neurotoxin. neurotoxic adjective amino acid [beta]-N-methylamino-L alanine (BMAA). According to this theory, the toxin becomes more concentrated as it moves up the food chain from the microbes, Nostoc nostoc Any of the cyanobacteria that make up the genus Nostoc. The cells are arranged in beadlike chains grouped together in a gelatinous mass. Ranging from microscopic to walnut-sized, nostoc masses may be found on soil and floating in still water. cyanobacteria cyanobacteria (sī'ənōbăktĭr`ēə, sī-ăn'ō–) or blue-green algae, photosynthetic bacteria that contain chlorophyll. , to tropical plants called cycads to bats to the Chamorro people (SN: 8/14/04, p. 110). Now, Cox's team suggests that people far from Guam could be exposed to BMAA. A survey found the toxin in 20 of 21 genera of cyanobacteria that live in water and soil around the world, the researchers report in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. . They also isolated the toxin from cyanobacteria living symbiotically with other organisms, including a lichen and four species of flowering plants. In other small, preliminary studies, the researchers also found BMAA in brain tissues of 9 Canadians who died with Alzheimer's disease, but not in the brains of 14 others who died of causes not related to neurological disease. However, the researchers caution that the link between BMAA and neurological diseases remains unclear.--S.M. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion