Biomagnification of cyanobacterial neurotoxins and neurodegenerative disease among the Chamorro people of Guam
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- 11 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (23) , 13380-13383
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2235808100
Abstract
We here report biomagnification (the increasing accumulation of bioactive, often deleterious molecules through higher trophic levels of a food chain) of the neurotoxic nonprotein amino acid β-methylamino- l -alanine (BMAA) in the Guam ecosystem. Free-living cyanobacteria produce 0.3 μg/g BMAA, but produce 2-37 μg/g as symbionts in the coralloid roots of cycad trees. BMAA is concentrated in the developing reproductive tissues of the cycad Cycas micronesica , averaging 9 μg/g in the fleshy seed sarcotesta and a mean of 1,161 μg/g BMAA in the outermost seed layer. Flying foxes ( Pteropus mariannus ), which forage on the seeds, accumulate a mean of 3,556 μg/g BMAA. Flying foxes are a prized food item of the indigenous Chamorro people who boil them in coconut cream and eat them whole. Chamorros who die of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism-dementia complex (AL-SPDC), a neurodegenerative disease with symptoms similar to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and Alzheimer's disease, have an average of 6.6 μg/g BMAA in their brain tissues. The biomagnification of BMAA through the Guam ecosystem fits a classic triangle of increasing concentrations of toxic compounds up the food chain. This may explain why the incidence of ALS-PDC among the Chamorro was 50-100 times the incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis elsewhere. Biomagnification of cyanobacterial BMAA may not be unique to Guam; our discovery of BMAA in the brain tissue from Alzheimer's patients from Canada suggests alternative ecological pathways for the bioaccumulation of BMAA in aquatic or terrestrial ecosystems.Keywords
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