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      Cyanobacterial protease inhibitor microviridin J causes a lethal molting disruption in Daphnia pulicaria.

      Applied and Environmental Microbiology
      Animals, Cyanobacteria, metabolism, Daphnia, drug effects, physiology, Feeding Behavior, Peptides, Cyclic, toxicity, Protease Inhibitors

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          Abstract

          Laboratory experiments identified microviridin J as the source of a fatal molting disruption in Daphnia species organisms feeding on Microcystis cells. The molting disruption was presumably linked to the inhibitory effect of microviridin J on daphnid proteases, suggesting that hundreds of further cyanobacterial protease inhibitors must be considered potentially toxic to zooplankton.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          15294849
          492328
          10.1128/AEM.70.8.5047-5050.2004

          Chemistry
          Animals,Cyanobacteria,metabolism,Daphnia,drug effects,physiology,Feeding Behavior,Peptides, Cyclic,toxicity,Protease Inhibitors

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