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Heterotrophic growth of Neochloris oleoabundans using glucose as a carbon source

Authors :
Raunel Tinoco-Valencia
Daniela Morales-Sánchez
Alfredo Martinez
John Kyndt
Source :
Biotechnology for Biofuels
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Background In comparison with phototrophic growth, heterotrophic conditions can significantly increase growth rates, final cell number and cell mass in microalgae cultures. Neochloris oleoabundans is a microalga of biotechnological interest that accumulates lipids under phototrophic and nitrogen-limited conditions. Heterotrophic flask culture experiments were conducted to identify carbon sources that can be metabolized by N. oleoabundans, and bioreactor batch and fed-batch (nitrate pulse additions) cultures supplemented with glucose were performed to study the cellular composition of the microalgae under balanced and high C/N ratios (glucose/nitrate). Results N. oleoabundans was able to grow using glucose and cellobiose as sole carbon sources under strict heterotrophic conditions. Under a balanced C/N ratio of 17 and using bioreactor batch cultures containing 3 g/L glucose, a maximal cell mass of 1.72 g/L was found, with protein being the major cell component (44% w/w). A maximal cell mass of 9.2 g/L was obtained using batch cultures at a C/N ratio of 278. Under these conditions, lipid accumulation was promoted (up to 52% w/w) through N-limitation, resulting in high lipid productivity (528.5 mg/L/day). Fed-batch cultures were performed at a C/N ratio of 278 and with nitrate pulse additions. This condition allowed a maximal cell mass of 14.2 g/L to be achieved and switched the metabolism to carbohydrate synthesis (up to 54% of dry weight), mainly in the form of starch. It was found that transmembrane transport under these conditions was dependent on a proton-motive force, indicating that glucose is transported by a symporter. Conclusions N. oleoabundans was able to grow under strict heterotrophic culture conditions with glucose or cellobiose as the only carbon source. The glucose used is transported by a symporter system. Batch cultures with a balanced C/N ratio accumulate proteins as the major cellular component; a high C/N ratio significantly increased the dry cell mass and resulted in a high lipid content, and a high cell density was achieved using fed-batch cultures promoting carbohydrate accumulation. These results suggest heterotrophic batch cultures of N. oleoabundans as an alternative for the production of proteins or lipids with simple culture strategies and minimal-mineral media supplemented with glucose.

Details

ISSN :
17546834
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biotechnology for Biofuels
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....040533a70dfb71e6140d56a7911a2130
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1754-6834-6-100