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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Ciminiello is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Ciminiello.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2010

Complex palytoxin-like profile of Ostreopsis ovata. Identification of four new ovatoxins by high-resolution liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry.

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell'Aversano; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Laura Grauso; Luciana Tartaglione; Franca Guerrini; Rossella Pistocchi

Over the past decades, Italian coastlines have been plagued by recurring presence of the benthic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis ovata. Such an alga has caused severe sanitary emergencies and economic losses due to its production of palytoxin-like compounds. Previous studies have confirmed the presence of ovatoxin-a (OVTX-a) as the major toxin of the algal toxin profile together with small amounts of putative palytoxin (PLTX). In our ongoing research on O. ovata toxins we report herein on in-depth investigation of an O. ovata culture carried out by high-resolution (HR) liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS(2)). Particularly, the presence of putative PLTX and OVTX-a was confirmed and the occurrence in the extract of four new palytoxin-like compounds, OVTX-b, -c, -d, and -e, was highlighted. Elemental formulae have been assigned to the new ovatoxins and information has been gained about their structural features. A quantitative study of the O. ovata culture extract indicated that the whole of the new ovatoxins represents about 46% of the total toxin content and, thus, their presence has to be taken into account when LC/MS-based monitoring programs of either plankton or contaminated seafood are carried out.


Toxicon | 2010

Comparative growth and toxin profile of cultured Ostreopsis ovata from the Tyrrhenian and Adriatic Seas.

Franca Guerrini; Laura Pezzolesi; Andrea Feller; Manuela Riccardi; Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell'Aversano; Luciana Tartaglione; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Rossella Pistocchi

Massive blooms of the benthic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis ovata Fukuyo have recently occurred along the whole Italian coastlines, both Tyrrhenian and Adriatic, resulting sometimes in benthonic biocenosis sufferings and, occasionally, in human health problems. In this work, two strains of O. ovata collected in 2006 along the Adriatic and Tyrrhenian coastlines and grown in culture were studied to characterize their growth and toxin profile. The two strains showed different cell volumes, the Adriatic strain being nearly twice bigger than the Tyrrhenian, but they had similar slow growth rates. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analyses indicated that both strains produce putative palytoxin (pPLTX) and ovatoxin-a (OVTX-a), a palytoxin-like compound presenting 2 oxygen atoms less than palytoxin. Toxin content was determined at the end of the stationary and exponential growth phases and reached the highest value in the Adriatic strain at the end of the stationary phase, with concentrations of 353.3 microg l(-1) for OVTX-a and 30.4 microg l(-1) for pPLTX. Toxin released in the growth medium was also measured and resulted to be the highest at the end of the stationary phase, suggesting that a long lasting bloom could enhance the toxin content in the water and cause toxic effects in people inhaling the aerosol.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Isolation and Structure Elucidation of Ovatoxin-a, the Major Toxin Produced by Ostreopsis ovata

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell’Aversano; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Laura Grauso; Luciana Tartaglione; Franca Guerrini; Laura Pezzolesi; Rossella Pistocchi; Silvana Vanucci

Since 2005, the benthic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata has bloomed across the Mediterranean basin, provoking serious toxic outbreaks. LC/MS studies have identified a number of palytoxin-like compounds, termed ovatoxins, along with trace amounts of putative palytoxin as the causative agents of the O. cf. ovata -related human sufferings. So far, any risk assessment for ovatoxins as well as establishment of their allowance levels in seafood has been prevented by the lack of pure toxins. The present paper reports on the isolation, NMR-based structural determination, and preliminary mouse lethality evaluation of ovatoxin-a, the major toxic compound contained in O. cf. ovata extracts. Availability of pure ovatoxin-a will open the double prospect of fully evaluating its toxicity and preparing reference standards to be employed in LC/MS quantitative analyses. Elucidation of ovatoxin-as complex structure will ultimately herald the understanding of the molecular bases of ovatoxins bioactivity.


Toxicon | 2011

LC-MS of palytoxin and its analogues: State of the art and future perspectives.

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell’Aversano; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Luciana Tartaglione

The state of the art of LC-MS of palytoxin and its analogues is reported in the present review. MS data for palytoxin, 42-hydroxy-palytoxin, ostreocin-D, mascarenotoxins, and ovatoxins, obtained using different ionization techniques, namely fast-atom bombardment (FAB), matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI), and electrospray ionization (ESI), are summarized together with the LC-MS methods used for their detection. Application of the developed LC-MS methods to both plankton and seafood analysis is also reported, paying attention to the extraction procedures used and to limits of detection (LOD) and quantitation (LOQ) achieved. In a research setting, LC-MS has shown a good potential in determination of palytoxin and its analogues from various sources, but, in a regulatory setting, routine LC-MS analysis of palytoxins is still at a preliminary stage. The LOQ currently achieved in seafood analysis appears insufficient to detect palytoxins in shellfish extract at levels close to the tolerance limit for palytoxins (30 μg/kg) proposed by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA, 2009). In addition, lacking of certified reference standard of palytoxins as well as of validation studies for the proposed LC-MS methods represent important issues that should be faced for future perspectives of LC-MS technique.


Toxicon | 2003

Complex yessotoxins profile in Protoceratium reticulatum from north-western Adriatic sea revealed by LC-MS analysis.

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell'Aversano; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Silvana Magno; Franca Guerrini; Rossella Pistocchi; Laurita Boni

While the occurrence of yessotoxin (YTX) has been reported worldwide from Protoceratium reticulatum, the biogenetic origin of some YTX analogues is still unknown, thus raising an issue whether they are metabolites of YTX formed in mussels or true products of different dinoflagellate species. Findings reported herein suggest that P. reticulatum from the north-western Adriatic sea is responsible for production, together with YTX (1), of homoYTX (2), 45-OHYTX (3), carboxyYTX (5), and noroxoYTX (7). YTX and its analogues have been determined by high performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS and HPLC-MSn experiments). The result is the first to confirm production of these YTX analogues from this species and indicate it as a producing organism of homoYTX, 45-OHYTX, carboxyYTX, and noroxoYTX found in shellfish.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1998

Isolation of adriatoxin, a new analogue of yessotoxin from mussels of the Adriatic Sea

Patrizia Ciminiello; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Silvana Magno; Roberto Poletti; Romano Viviani

Abstract Diarrhetic shellfish toxin composition in the hepatopancreas of mussels from northern Adriatic sea was investigated. Along with yessotoxin (YTX), homoyessotoxin (homoYTX) and 45-hydroxyyessotoxin (45-OHYTX), identified by comparison of their chromatographic and spectral properties with those reported in the literature, we isolated a new analogue of YTX, adriatoxin (ATX), whose structure was determined on the basis of spectral evidence.


Toxicon | 1997

Yessotoxin in mussels of the northern Adriatic Sea

Patrizia Ciminiello; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Silvana Magno; Roberto Poletti; Masayuki Satake; Romano Viviani; Takeshi Yasumoto

This study investigated the composition of diarrhoetic shellfish toxins in the hepatopancreas of mussels from the northern Adriatic Sea. The major toxins were shown to be yessotoxin, identified by its chromatographic properties and spectral data, and okadaic acid, detected both by fluorometric high-performance liquid chromatography and by comparison of its spectral properties with those of an authentic sample.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2012

Unique Toxin Profile of a Mediterranean Ostreopsis cf. ovata Strain: HR LC-MSn Characterization of Ovatoxin-f, a New Palytoxin Congener

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell’Aversano; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Luciana Tartaglione; Cecilia Battocchi; Rita Crinelli; Elisa Carloni; Mauro Magnani; Antonella Penna

Currently, the benthic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata represents a serious concern to human health in the whole Mediterranean basin due to the production of palytoxin congeners, a putative palytoxin and ovatoxins (ovatoxin-a, -b, -c, -d/-e), listed among the most potent marine toxins. High resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HR LC-MS) based investigation of a North Western Adriatic strain of Ostreopsis cf. ovata collected at Portonovo (Italy) in 2008 is reported herein. Toxin profile was different from those previously reported for other O. cf. ovata, both qualitatively and quantitatively. For the first time, ovatoxin-a did not dominate the toxin profile, and a new palytoxin congener, here named ovatoxin-f, was detected. Ovatoxin-f and its elemental formula present C(2)H(4) more than ovatoxin-a. HR CID MS(n) experiments allowed us to restrict structural differences between ovatoxin-a and -f to the region between C-95 and C-102, a region not previously been described to be modified in other palytoxins. Ovatoxin-f represents the major component of the toxin profile of the analyzed strain accounting for 50% of the total toxin content, while ovatoxin-a, the dominant toxin in most of the Mediterranean O. cf. ovata strains we have analyzed so far, is the second major component of the toxin profile (23%). Thus, the presence of ovatoxin-f should be taken into account when monitoring programs for palytoxin-like compounds in microalgae and/or seawater are carried out.


Water Research | 2012

Influence of temperature and salinity on Ostreopsis cf. ovata growth and evaluation of toxin content through HR LC-MS and biological assays

Laura Pezzolesi; Franca Guerrini; Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell’Aversano; Emma Dello Iacovo; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Luciana Tartaglione; Rossella Pistocchi

In the Mediterranean Sea, blooms of Ostreopsis cf. ovata and Ostreopsis siamensis have become increasingly frequent in the last decade and O. cf. ovata was found to produce palytoxin-like compounds (putative palytoxin, ovatoxin-a, -b, -c, -d and -e), a class of highly potent toxins. The environmental conditions seem to play a key role in influencing the abundance of Ostreopsis spp. High cell densities are generally recorded in concomitance with relatively high temperature and salinity and low hydrodynamics conditions. In this study the effects of temperature and salinity on the growth and toxicity of an Adriatic O. cf. ovata isolate were investigated. The highest growth rates of the Adriatic strain were recorded for cultures grown at 20 °C and at salinity values of 36 and 40, in accordance with natural bloom surveys. Toxicity was affected by growth conditions, with the highest toxin content on a per cell basis being measured at 25 °C and salinity 32. However, the highest total toxin content on a per litre basis was recorded at 20 °C and salinity 36, since under such conditions the growth yield was the highest. O. cf. ovata had lethal effects on Artemia nauplii and juvenile sea basses, and produced haemolysis of sheep erythrocytes. A comparison between haemolysis neutralization assay and HR LC-MS results showed a good correlation between haemolytic effect and total toxin content measured through HR LC-MS. Considering the increasing need for rapid and sensitive methods to detect palytoxin in natural samples, the haemolytic assay appears a useful method for preliminary quantification of the whole of palytoxin-like compounds in algal extracts.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2009

Stereostructure and Biological Activity of 42-Hydroxy-palytoxin: A New Palytoxin Analogue from Hawaiian Palythoa Subspecies

Patrizia Ciminiello; Carmela Dell'Aversano; Dello Iacovo E; Ernesto Fattorusso; Martino Forino; Laura Grauso; Luciana Tartaglione; Florio C; Lorenzon P; De Bortoli M; Aurelia Tubaro; Mark Poli; Gary S. Bignami

This paper reports on the analysis of the toxin content from Palythoa tuberculosa and Palythoa toxica samples collected off of the Hawaiian coast. Our work, based on in-depth high-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis along with extensive NMR study, led us to structurally characterize 42-hydroxy-palytoxin, a new palytoxin congener. This toxin and palytoxin itself appeared to be the major components of toxic extract from a P. tuberculosa sample, while 42-hydroxy-palytoxin was proven by far to be the main palytoxin derivative in P. toxica. Functional studies on this new palytoxin-like compound suggest that the new palytoxin analogue and palytoxin itself present similar biological activities.

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