Abstract

A molecular method using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of small subunit gene sequences (18S rDNA) and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) was used to determine both the population complexity and species identification of organisms in harmful algal blooms. Eighteen laboratory cultures of dinoflagellates, including Akashiwo, Gymnodinium, Heterocapsa, Karenia, Karlodinium, Pfiesteria, and Pfiesteria-like species were analyzed using dinoflagellate-specific oligonucleotide primers and DGGE. The method is sensitive and able to determine the number of species in a sample, as well as the taxonomic identity of each species, and is particularly useful in detecting differences between species of the same genus, as well as differences between morphologically similar species. Using this method, each of eight Pfiesteria-like species was verified as being clonal isolates of Pfiesteria piscicida. The sensitivity of dinoflagellate DGGE is approximately 1000 cells/ml, which is 100-fold less sensitive than real-time PCR. However, the advantage of DGGE lies in its ability to analyze dinoflagellate community structure without needing to know what is there, while real-time PCR provides much higher sensitivity and detection levels, if probes exist for the species of interest, attributes that complement DGGE analysis. In a blinded test, dinoflagellate DGGE was used to analyze two environmental fish kill samples whose species composition had been previously determined by other analyses. DGGE correctly identified the dominant species in these samples as Karlodinium micrum and Heterocapsa rotundata, proving the efficacy of this method on environmental samples. Toxin analysis of a clonal isolate obtained from the fish kill samples confirmed the presence of KmTx2, corroborating the earlier genetic identification of toxic K. micrum in the fish kill water sample.

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