4.7 Article

Optimization of the growth and marennine production by the diatom Haslea ostrearia in photobioreactor

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.algal.2021.102251

Keywords

Microalgae; Photobioreactor; Haslea ostrearia; Marennine; Culture; Optimization

Funding

  1. European Commission under the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program GHaNA (The Genus Haslea, New marine resources for blue biotechnology and Aquaculture) [734708/GHANA/H2020-MSCA-RISE-2016]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that culturing benthic diatom Haslea ostrearia in a conventional mixed PBR can overcome culture mass transfer limitation and increase photosynthesis-related kinetics by increasing dissolved inorganic carbon concentration and silica enrichment. Additionally, a fed-batch strategy on Si-P supply led to an increase in biomass productivity, while nutrient-limited conditions resulted in higher extracellular marennine productivity under different nutrient deprivations. The effect of light availability on biomass and extracellular marennine production kinetics was also investigated, showing a direct relation between Mean Rate of Photon Absorption and productivity levels.
The benthic diatom Haslea ostrearia which has the capacity to excrete a blue pigment called marennine remains a challenging organism to culture in a photobioreactor (PBR). This study investigates the interest of culture in conventional mixed PBR over immobilized-cell protocols which proved successful but have rather low extracellular marennine (EMn) due to a limitation in mass or light transfer in the biofilm. In contrary, culture in mixed PBR has been proven to overcome culture mass transfer limitation, and to provide a high level of control over light access to cells, enabling the application of systematic optimization of photosynthesis-related kinetics. Increasing the dissolved inorganic carbon concentration up to values of around 5?10 mM was found to increase both growth kinetics and EMn production. Growth medium enrichment with silica (Si) was however found to be challenging due to chemical precipitation. A fed-batch strategy on Si-P supply was implemented, leading to an increase in biomass productivity (51.8 ? 2.3 mgX L-1 d-1). Although EMn was produced continuously, the nutrient-limited conditions led to higher productivity with 9.2 ? 1.7 mgEMn m- 2 d-1, 37.9 ? 0.7 mgEMn m- 2 d-1 and 54.5 ? 1.8 mgEMn m- 2 d-1 for phosphorus, silicon and nitrogen deprivation respectively. The effect of light availability was also investigated, as represented by the Mean Rate of Photon Absorption (MRPA). A direct relation was shown for both biomass and EMn production kinetics. However, maximal biomass and EMn productivities were found at different MRPA values, respectively 1.7 ? 0.1 gx m- 2 d-1 at 12.3 ?molh? gx- 1 s-1 and 11.0 ? 0.5 mgEMn m- 2 d-1 at 8.4 ?molh? gx- 1 s- 1. Finally, a continuous EMn production was obtained in optimal conditions, leading to a productivity of 4.5 ? 0.16 mgEMn L-1 d-1, enabling validation of the conventional mixed PBR for H. ostrearia culture and continuous EMn production.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available