Tracing the origin and evolution of specialized biosynthetic pathways in marine organisms
Laure Martinelli, Nicolas Papon, Olivier P. Thomas, Vincent Courdavault

TL;DR
This paper explores how specialized toxic compounds in marine algae evolve, focusing on their biosynthesis and ecological impact.
Contribution
The study decodes the biosynthetic pathway of domoic acid in a specific diatom species, bridging evolutionary genomics with environmental research.
Findings
The DA biosynthetic route in Nitzschia navis-varingica was decoded.
Evolutionary genomics can enhance understanding of marine natural products.
Insights into kainoid production may aid in predicting and managing harmful algal blooms.
Abstract
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) pose public health and ecological risks in aquatic environments. HABs drive the bioaccumulation of a specific family of specialized metabolites known as “kainoids.” Kainoid derivatives, such as kainic acid (KA) and domoic acid (DA), are among the most toxic marine-derived metabolites produced by a limited number of algal species. While recent studies have provided insights into the molecular basis of KA and DA production in red algae and diatoms, knowledge of the biosynthesis of kainoids remains insufficient. In a new report published in mBio, Wood-Rocca et al. decode the DA biosynthetic route in the widespread Western Pacific benthic diatom Nitzschia navis-varingica (S. M. Wood-Rocca, N. Allsing, Y. Ashida, M. Mochizuki, et al., mBio 16:e02079-25, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02079-25). We discuss how evolutionary genomics studies bridge the gap…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine Toxins and Detection Methods · Microbial Natural Products and Biosynthesis · Marine Sponges and Natural Products
