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Shellfish accumulate microalgal toxins, which can make them unsafe for human consumption. In France, in accordance with EU regulations, three groups of marine toxins are currently under official monitoring: lipophilic toxins, saxitoxins, and domoic acid. Other unregulated toxin groups are also present in European shellfish, including emerging lipophilic and hydrophilic marine toxins (e.g., pinnatoxins, brevetoxins) and the neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA). To acquire data on emerging toxins in France, the monitoring program EMERGTOX was set up along the French coasts in 2018. Three new broad-spectrum LC-MS/MS methods were developed to quantify regulated and unregulated lipophilic and hydrophilic toxins and the BMAA group in shellfish (bivalve mollusks and gastropods). A single-laboratory validation of each of these methods was performed. Additionally, these specific, reliable, and sensitive operating procedures allowed the detection of groups of EU unregulated toxins in shellfish samples from French coasts: spirolides (SPX-13-DesMeC, SPX-DesMeD), pinnatoxins (PnTX-G, PnTX-A), gymnodimines (GYM-A), brevetoxins (BTX-2, BTX-3), microcystins (dmMC-RR, MC-RR), anatoxin, cylindrospermopsin and BMAA/DAB. Here, we present essentially the results of the unregulated toxins obtained from the French EMERGTOX monitoring plan during the past five years (2018-2022). Based on our findings, we outline future needs for monitoring to protect consumers from emerging unregulated toxins.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md21080435 | DOI Listing |
Aesthetic Plast Surg
July 2025
Monash University Australia, Clayton, VIC, Australia.
Introduction: Non-surgical aesthetic treatments (NSATs) have gained significant traction over the past two decades, prized for their minimally invasive nature, cost-effectiveness, and rapid outcomes. Yet complications associated with these procedures remain underreported, inadequately studied, and inconsistently regulated, compromising patient safety.
Methodology: This mixed-methods study synthesised global data from 457 peer-reviewed studies, 37,250 media articles, 2.
Cureus
May 2025
Neurosurgery, Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, Colton, USA.
The South American shamanic Kambô ritual involves applying the skin secretions of Phyllomedusa bicolor (giant monkey frog) to superficial burns for purported spiritual and therapeutic benefits. These secretions contain a complex mix of bioactive peptides, such as phyllocaerulein, phyllomedusin, phyllokinin, sauvagine, dermorphins, and deltorphins, that interact with diverse neurotransmitter and hormone receptor systems. Specifically, these peptides engage cholecystokinin (CCK) receptors, neurokinin-1 (NK1) receptors, bradykinin B2 receptors, corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) receptors, and opioid receptors (μ and δ subtypes), influencing gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, endocrine, and neurologic pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Membr Biol
August 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, 560012, India.
Pore-forming toxins (PFTs) belong to a class of proteins expressed by bacteria to initiate infections by unregulated pore formation on the plasma membrane of host cells. Although cholesterol is a key sterol motif that promotes toxin activity, the influence of oxysterols, upregulated in senescent cells or in other inflammatory disorders, on lytic activity has not received much attention. Using all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, we study the changes to the sterol binding landscape of membrane-inserted cytolysin A (ClyA), an -PFT expressed by E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Pathog
September 2025
Department of Microbiology, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India. Electronic address:
The rise of multidrug-resistant (MDR) Pseudomonas aeruginosa remains an unresolved and substantial challenge to public health, which highlights an urgent need for newer therapeutic strategies. Despite the availability of innumerable antibiotics that effectively eliminate bacterial infections, their unregulated consumption and overexploitation has promoted the development of multidrug resistance by inducing selection pressure. As the world progresses into the post-antibiotic era, antivirulence therapies that exploit a 'disarm-don't kill approach' are gaining momentum as a promising alternative to existing antimicrobial regimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHarmful Algae
May 2025
Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, WA, DC 20460, USA. Electronic address:
Cyanotoxins produced by harmful algal blooms (HABs) can negatively impact human health through ingestion of drinking water. Under most circumstances, public water systems (PWSs) have demonstrated that they can successfully manage the removal of low-to-moderate levels of cyanotoxins with conventional treatment. Intense or frequent blooms put some PWSs at higher risk for treatment breakthrough, meaning cyanotoxins can pass through the drinking water treatment process, and there are still some instances of reported cyanotoxin levels in drinking water.
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