Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Tetrodoxin or Saxitoxin is more toxic?

anti_vizsla - 1-2-2007 at 13:17

Hi all,
I would like to know which of the two toxins is more dangerous for humans.
I know both are marine toxins that require LC-MS or ELISA for detection, thus time consuming.
Is there a faster way to detect it with a good detection limit, lets say 10^(-7) M?

Thanks

Sauron - 1-2-2007 at 13:32

You want the short form answer? Saxitoxin by a long mile. If you want that quantified I would have to crack a book. Most likely you can find the answers in Merck Index as easily as I can.

Saxitoxin was the agent in the infamous "nondiscernible biomicroinoculator" CIA assassination weapon which Director William Colby disclosed to the Rockefeller (or maybe Church) Commission, leading to destruction of TSD's stock of the toxin. The weapon was essentially an airgun firing a tiny glass sliver tipped with a miniscule amount of toxin. Like the old Brylcream jingle: a little dab'll do ya.

The weapon was developed by a contractor named Paris Theodore at Seventrees Ltd. in New York City. Because of his cooperation with the congressional investigators his name is a dirty one now around certain parts of the Washington DC area, particularly along the George Washington Parkway in McLean.

As to your question concerning detection, the Japanese would be the ones with all the answeres about the blowfish toxin, as apart from the specialty fugu sashimi restaurants there I am unaware that it is a common problem.

The red tide dinoflagellates which produce saxitoxin are mostly a problem in the Pacific Northwestern US and Canada and the toxin accumulates in mollusks when these algae blooms happen, and sometimes seafood lovers are poisoned accidentally. A Canadian company produces a test kit for prevention of public health emergencies with saxitoxin, but I have few details. Sounds like a job for Google.

[Edited on 1-2-2007 by Sauron]

franklyn - 2-2-2007 at 03:03

Okay , so how does Saxitoxin compare to Brevetoxin. Both appear in the same
stew. Wiki does not have an informative entry on Brevetoxin , nor do other likely
sources. From what I recall it is comparabe to Botulinum Toxin in neurotoxicity.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_tide

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saxitoxin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brevetoxin

http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/wiki/index.php/It:Saxitoxin
http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/wiki/index.php/It:Brevetoxin

http://www.cbwinfo.com/Biological/BWList.shtml
http://www.cbwinfo.com/Biological/Toxins/Saxitoxin.html

http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/intro/bio_saxitoxin.htm

Here they appear indistinguishable _

http://www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/saxitoxin/casedef.asp
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/brevetoxin/casedef.asp

History of synthesis _

http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/stx/saxi.htm
http://www.ncl.ox.ac.uk/quicktime/brevetoxin.html
.


[Edited on 2-2-2007 by franklyn]

not_important - 2-2-2007 at 03:36

This

http://www.whoi.edu/science/B/people/mhahn/Trainer_Baden_139...

is the best I could find, and suugests that saxitoxin may be slightly more toxic; however they have differing modes of action and may concentrate in different tissues.

longimanus - 3-2-2007 at 02:32

http://chemister.da.ru/Toxicology/Toxins/tetrodotoxin.htm,
http://chemister.da.ru/Toxicology/Toxins/saxitoxin.htm
and
http://chemister.da.ru/Toxicology/ld50.htm

chemrox - 10-2-2007 at 15:55

synthesis: http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/stx/saxi.htm

chemrox - 10-2-2007 at 15:56

from that it's evident one could make a whole series of related agents

franklyn - 12-6-2010 at 07:09

http://www.fasebj.org/cgi/reprint/3/7/1807.pdf

.

zed - 17-6-2010 at 02:23

Well, tetrodoxin is probably the easiest to come by. There is a common, brown, rough skinned, orange bellied, water salamander (newt) in Northern California thats skin is loaded with it. As a kid, I caught and held many in my hands. Put one in my mouth for a moment onetime, on a bet. Not a good idea!

Just bag a few, extract the toxin, and.....Oh wait, this is the Science Madness Forum isn't it. The assassinations forum is elsewhere. Though it does look like 500micrograms Sub-Cutaneous, will do the trick for a 170 lb human.

Not that killing is the only use for this material. Dose somebody with this stuff, bury them alive (though fully conscious), dig 'em up after a few days, and put them on a complex, traditional, Haitian drug combination .... And, you could create your very own Science Zombies.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rough-skinned_newt

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrodotoxin



[Edited on 17-6-2010 by zed]

franklyn - 22-6-2010 at 10:40

http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=424&am...

.