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Table 1 Cyanotoxins with public health significance from acute exposures

From: Recreational and occupational field exposure to freshwater cyanobacteria – a review of anecdotal and case reports, epidemiological studies and the challenges for epidemiologic assessment

Toxin or toxin group

Classification by principal target organ systems

Toxin-producing genera

LD50(i.p. mouse)

References

Microcystins

Hepatotoxins

Anabaena, Anabaenopsis, Aphanocapsa, Arthrospira, Hapalosiphon, Microcystis, Nostoc, Oscillatoria, Planktothrix, Snowella, Woronichinia

25->1000 μg/kg

[10, 19, 26, 125-128]

Nodularins

Hepatotoxins

Nodularia

30–60 μg/kg

[8, 26, 129]

Anatoxin-a, homoanatoxin-a

Neurotoxins

Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Arthrospira, Cylindrospermum, Microcystis, Oscillatoria, Phormidium, Planktothrix, Raphidiopsis

200–375 μg/kg

[8, 10, 18, 26, 130-135]

Anatoxin-a(s)

Neurotoxin

Anabaena

20–40 μg/kg

[8, 26, 132]

Saxitoxins

Neurotoxins

Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Cylindrospermopsis, Lyngbya, Planktothrix

10–30 μg/kg

[26, 127, 132, 136-140]

Cylindrospermopsin

General cytotoxin (multiple organ systems affected, incl. liver, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, heart, spleen, thymus, skin)

Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Cylindrospermopsis, Raphidiopsis, Umezakia

2.1 mg/kg (24 hours) 200 μg/kg (5–6 days)

[8, 10, 17, 132, 141-145]

Aplysiatoxin, debromoaplysiatoxin

Dermal toxins; probable gastro-intestinal inflammatory toxin

Lyngbya

107–117 μg/kg

[146-152]

Lyngbyatoxin A

Possible gastro-intestinal inflammatory toxin

Lyngbya

250 μg/kg (?LD100)

[153]