Abstract

Recent studies demonstrated that the toxic red tide phytoplankton Chattonella spp. produce activated oxygen species such as superoxide anion (O2-), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and hydroxyl radicals (·OH), which may be responsible for the toxicity of this flagellate. However, the mechanism behind the production of these oxygen radicals and H2O2 by Chattonella spp. is largely unknown, and the physiological significance of activated oxygen species for Chattonella spp. is also unclear. In the present study, we investigated the involvement of iron in the generation of O2-and H2O2 by C. marina. The generation of O2-by C. marina was related to the growth phase; the highest rate of O2-production was observed during the exponential growth phase. However, no such increase during the exponential growth phase was observed in C. marina growing in an iron-deficient medium, even though the growth of C. marina was not significantly affected by iron-deficiency during the first 4 d. In addition, the iron chelator desferrioxamine (Desferal) strongly inhibited the generation of both O2-and H2O2 by C. marina in a concentration-dependent manner. The growth of C. marina was also inhibited by Desferal. Furthermore, in the presence of 500 μM Desferal, C. marina-induced growth inhibition of the marine bacteria Vibrio alginolyticus was almost completely abolished. These results suggest that iron is required for the generation of activated oxygen species by C. marina, as well as for its own growth.

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