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JPR Advance Access published online on February 16, 2004

Journal of Plankton Research, doi:10.1093/plankt/fbh037
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Received July 29, 2003;
accepted December 31, 2003

Article

Toxin and molecular analysis of Gymnodinium catenatum (Dinophyceae) strains from Galicia (NW Spain) and Andalucía (S Spain)

M. Camino Ordás 1*, Santia Go Fraga 2, José M. Franco 2, Amando Ordás 3, and Antonio Figueras 1

1 Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (CSIC), Eduardo Cabello 6, 36208 Vigo, Spain
2 Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Apartado 1552, Cabo Estai- Canido, 36200 Vigo, Spain
3 Misión Biológica de Galicia (CSIC), Apartado 28, 36080 Pontevedra, Spain

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: camino{at}iim.csic.es.


   Abstract

Nineteen strains of Gymnodinium catenatum were isolated from one bloom in Andalucía (S Spain) and from different blooms in Galicia (NW Spain). The PSP toxin profiles of sixteen of the strains were analyzed, and although the saxitoxin was exclusive for the Galician strains, the corresponding dendogram showed no clustering of the isolates from this location. However, nine out of eleven Andalusian strains were included in the same cluster. In order to compare toxin with molecular analysis, a fragment of the large subunit ribosomal (LSU) RNA gene was partially sequenced for all of the strains and fully sequenced for the five strains that had shown most different growth curves. Since all of the strains were identical in the LSU sequenced region, another fragment comprising the internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS 1), 5.8S rRNA gene and ITS 2, was sequenced and compared among all of the strains. Although this region has been used before for the detection of intraspecific variability, it was similar in all our strains. Finally, to detect molecular differences in the strains, a random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis was performed. The corresponding cluster analysis grouped the strains in three clusters: one of them comprised all the Galician strains plus three from Andalucía, another one included eight Andalusian strains, and the last one, more separated form the two previous, was constituted by two Andalucía isolates. Although the results of the toxin and RAPD analysis were different, seven Andalusian strains were clustered together in both dendograms. Since neither the toxin nor the RAPD analysis brought out a clear geographic signal, we can conclude that differences in toxin content and RAPD profile between the isolates of G. catenatum are probably not linked to the location in which the strains were collected.


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