scholarly journals Nutrients formulation to maximize Ankistrodesmus sp. microalgal cell biomass and lipid productivities

Author(s):  
Wanida Pan-utai ◽  
Penjit Srinophakun ◽  
Wilasinee Inrung

Ankistrodesmus sp. belongs to a group of microalgae which plays a significant role in various applications. Availability of nutrients is one of the primary factors regulating the growth and development of microalgae. Twelve experiments were run to determine the optimum media formulation of significant nutrient components for maximum biomass and lipid productivities of Ankistrodesmus sp. IFRPD 1061 cultivation using Plackett- Burman design. All nutrients significantly affected biomass productivity. Highest lipid productivity may not only necessarily originate from biomass cells with highest lipid content but also depend on nutrient formulation of culture media. Microalgal cell growth rate plays a major role in biomass and lipid production. Some nutrients including phosphorus and sodium did not significantly affect lipid productivity, therefore, optimizing nutrient contents could be applied to further scale-up microalgal production.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Poonam Singh

Microalgae are considered to be a potential feedstock for biodiesel production. However, the main concern with regard to the large scale microalgal biodiesel production process is its competence and economic viability. The commercial realization of microalgal biodiesel production requires substantial impetus towards development of efficient strategies to improve lipid yields upstream. Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) stress during cultivation are the widely used lipid accumulation strategies for microalgae. However, these individual nutrient stress strategies are associated with compromised biomass productivity which hampers overall lipid productivity. Lipid enhancement strategies based on light, temperature and CO2 are associated with technological barriers for scale up and incur additional cost. Thus, the main aim of this study was to develop an integrated, easily applicable and scalable lipid enhancement strategy based on nutrients and metals such as N, P, iron (Fe), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca) and EDTA stress for selected indigenous microalgal strains. The effect of metal concentrations individually and in combination on microalgal lipids and biomass production is a scarcely exploited area. In this study, a novel approach involving individual as well as combined metals and EDTA stress under N and P limited conditions for lipid enhancement in microalgae was investigated. Microalgal growth physiology, photosynthetic performance, biochemical composition (lipid, carbohydrate and protein) and expression of selected key genes involved in photosynthesis (rbcL) and fatty acid biosynthesis (accD) were studied both under selected individual and combined stress conditions. Out of seven microalgal isolates obtained during the initial isolation and screening process, two strains were selected for lipid enhancement study based on their growth rates, biomass yields, lipid content and lipid productivities. The strains were later identified as Acutodesmus obliquus and Chlorella sorokiniana based on both morphological characteristics and phylogenetical analysis. The selected strains were thereafter subjected to different cultivation conditions involving varying metal, EDTA and nutrient stress conditions. A significant increase in lipid productivity was observed when the concentrations of Fe, Mg and EDTA were increased and Ca was decreased to degree in the N and P stress BG11 medium. For A. obliquus, a highest lipid productivity of 80.23 mgL-1d-1 was achieved with the developed strategy under limited N (750 mg L-1) condition which was 2.18 fold higher than BG11 medium and 1.89 fold higher than N limited condition alone. Similarly, for C. sorokiniana, highest lipid productivity of 77.03 mgL-1d-1 was achieved with the developed strategy under limited N (500 mgL-1) and P (10 mgL-1) which was 2.67 fold higher than BG11 medium and 2.35 fold higher than N and P limited condition alone. For both the microalgal strains, Fe was the most significant trace metal affecting their lipid productivity. These above observations were further confirmed through photosynthetic performance analysis and gene expression studies. At mid log phase, 6.38 and 5.15 fold increases in the expression levels of rbcL gene were observed under combined stress (OCMS+OE) as compared to the control (BG11) condition in A. obliquus and C. sorokiniana respectively. This also resulted in an increased expression level of accD gene involved in lipid biosynthesis to 10.25 fold and 9.79 fold in A. obliquus and C. sorokiniana respectively at late log phase. The results from expression studies of rbcL and accD genes were in compliance with biomass yields, photosynthetic performance, protein yield and lipid productivities for both the strains under different cultivating conditions. The universal applicability of the above strategy was confirmed by applying it to five other microalgae strains isolated in this study which resulted in considerable increase in their overall lipid productivity under optimized conditions. Attempts were made to scale up the lab scale study to open circular pond (3000L) cultivation for A. obliquus. Results showed a 2.08 fold increase in lipid productivity under optimized conditions compared to the control, which emphasizes the scalability of the developed strategy even under uncontrolled conditions. In conclusion, the developed combined metal and EDTA stress strategy not only assisted in alleviating the biomass productivity but also enhanced the lipid accumulation which resulted in overall increased lipid productivity under N and P limited condition. Furthermore, the improved carbohydrate and protein productivities observed with the developed lipid enhancement strategy make it suitable for biorefinery approach with multiple products. An improvement in lipid profile and high biodiesel conversion were also observed with this universally applicable and scalable lipid enhancement strategy confirming their potential applicability during large scale cultivation for biodiesel production.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin D. Morales-Álvarez ◽  
Claudia M. Rivera-Hoyos ◽  
Ángela M. Cardozo-Bernal ◽  
Raúl A. Poutou-Piñales ◽  
Aura M. Pedroza-Rodríguez ◽  
...  

Laccases are multicopper oxidases that catalyze aromatic and nonaromatic compounds with concomitant reduction of molecular oxygen to water. They are of great interest due to their potential biotechnological applications. In this work we statistically improved culture media for recombinant GILCC1 (rGILCC1) laccase production at low scale from Ganoderma lucidum containing the construct pGAPZαA-GlucPost-Stop in Pichia pastoris. Temperature, pH stability, and kinetic parameter characterizations were determined by monitoring concentrate enzyme oxidation at different ABTS substrate concentrations. Plackett-Burman Design allowed improving enzyme activity from previous work 36.08-fold, with a laccase activity of 4.69 ± 0.39 UL−1 at 168 h of culture in a 500 mL shake-flask. Concentrated rGILCC1 remained stable between 10 and 50°C and retained a residual enzymatic activity greater than 70% at 60°C and 50% at 70°C. In regard to pH stability, concentrated enzyme was more stable at pH 4.0 ± 0.2 with a residual activity greater than 90%. The lowest residual activity greater than 55% was obtained at pH 10.0 ± 0.2. Furthermore, calculated apparent enzyme kinetic parameters were a Vmax of 6.87 × 10−5 mM s−1, with an apparent Km of 5.36 × 10−2 mM. Collectively, these important stability findings open possibilities for applications involving a wide pH and temperature ranges.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharda Sahu ◽  
ANIL Prakash

In the present study, a siderophore compound produced by an endophytic fungus, Talaromyces trachyspermus was optimized for maximum production, 88.9 % SU by applying Plackett-Burman design and Response Surface Methodology through Central Composite Design that showed the succinic acid (1.141 g/L), sucrose (31.028 g/L) and temperature (27.475 ºC) as significant factors. On scale up, a further increase in siderophore yield was obtained (by 3%) The compound was extracted, purified and detected chemically as catecholate siderophore showing max. λ absorbance at 279nm. Contained of hydroxy benzene as shown by GC-MS analysis and further identified as berberine by HRLC-MS studies. The compound berberine is clinically a very important drug with several ethnobotanical properties. This is rare to report fungal catecholate and first to report the production of berberine from Talaromyces species .In the present study, a siderophore compound produced by an endophytic fungus, Talaromyces trachyspermus was optimized for maximum production, 88.9 % SU by applying Plackett-Burman design and Response Surface Methodology through Central Composite Design that showed the succinic acid (1.141 g/L), sucrose (31.028 g/L) and temperature (27.475 ºC) as significant factors. On scale up, a further increase in siderophore yield was obtained (by 3%) The compound was extracted, purified and detected chemically as catecholate siderophore showing max. λ absorbance at 279nm. Contained of hydroxy benzene as shown by GC-MS analysis and further identified as berberine by HRLC-MS studies. The compound berberine is clinically a very important drug with several ethnobotanical properties. This is rare to report fungal catecholate and first to report the production of berberine from Talaromyces species .


2013 ◽  
Vol 864-867 ◽  
pp. 49-55
Author(s):  
Yong Teng Zhao ◽  
Peng Zhao ◽  
Tao Li ◽  
Lin Wang ◽  
Xu Ya Yu

The impact of glucose on the growth under heterotrophic and mixotrophic conditions for Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 as well as its lipid content was investigated through the Andrew equation. The results demonstrated that the subsaturation constant of Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 under heterotrophic condition to glucose was smaller than that of Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 under mixotrophic condition, indicating that Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 is more sensitive to glucose under heterotrophic condition. Furthermore, the biomass productivity, lipid productivity and lipid content of Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 all reached the peak at 10 g L-1 of glucose concentration under both heterotrophic and mixotrophic conditions. Compared with other Chlorella sp., the Monoraphidium sp. FXY-10 represented higher lipid productivity (131.79 mg L-1 d-1).


2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 281-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Mašković ◽  
B. Jančić-Stojanović ◽  
A. Malenović ◽  
D. Ivanović ◽  
M. Medenica

Author(s):  
Néstor David Giraldo ◽  
Sandra Marcela Correa ◽  
Andrés Arbeláez ◽  
Felix L. Figueroa ◽  
Rigoberto Ríos-Estepa ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this study the metabolic responses of Botryococcus braunii were analyzed upon different inorganic carbon dosages and nutrient limitation conditions in terms of lipid and biomass productivity, as well as photosynthetic performance. The nutritional schemes evaluated included different levels of sodium bicarbonate and nitrogen and phosphorus starvation, which were contrasted against standard cultures fed with CO2. Bicarbonate was found to be an advantageous carbon source since high dosages caused a significant increase in biomass and lipid productivity, in addition to an enhanced photosynthetic quantum yield and neutral lipids abundance. This contrasts to the commonly used approach of microalgae nutrient limitation, which leads to high lipid accumulation at the expense of impaired cellular growth, causing a decline in overall lipid productivity. The lipidome analysis served to hypothesize about the influence of the nutritional context on B. braunii structural and storage lipid metabolism, besides the adaptive responses exhibited by cells that underwent nutrient stress.


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