Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2065859 Toxicon 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

We observed the effects of the toxin extracted from various tissues of wild and cultured puffer fish on voltage-dependent sodium current (INa) using single rat CA1 neurons, and compared the results with that of tetrodotoxin (TTX). Toxin extracts from wild puffer fish inhibited INa in a dilution-dependent manner, and toxin extracts from liver or ovary produced 300 times greater inhibition than that from muscle, and corresponded to about 65 μg TTX/g tissue. We also used puffer fish cultured in net cages or in tanks set up on land, in an attempt to isolate them from the food chain. The toxin extracts from cultured puffer fish also suppressed INa, but the inhibition was much weaker, and the effects of toxin extracts were almost the same in all tissues examined including liver, ovary, muscle, etc. We calculated the maximum edible amount for each tissue, assuming that the lethal dose of TTX is 1–10 μg/kg, and we found that the liver or ovary was edible in the case of cultured puffer fish.

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