4.7 Article

Ethanol Extraction of Polar Lipids from Nannochloropsis oceanica for Food, Feed, and Biotechnology Applications Evaluated Using Lipidomic Approaches

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md19110593

Keywords

Nannochloropsis oceanica; solvent extraction; lipidomics; glycolipids; phospholipids; betaine lipids

Funding

  1. project AlgaValor, from the Portugal 2020 program [POCI-01-0247-FEDER-035234, LISBOA-01-0247-FEDER-035234, ALG-01-0247-FEDER-035234]
  2. FEDER [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-030962]
  3. FCT/MCTES

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This study found that utilizing different solvents to extract polar lipids from N. oceanica can impact the lipid composition of the final extracts. Using ethanol in combination with ultrasonic technologies can improve lipid extraction efficiency and antioxidant activity, with the potential to develop high-added-value biotechnological applications.
Nannochloropsis oceanica can accumulate lipids and is a good source of polar lipids, which are emerging as new value-added compounds with high commercial value for the food, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical industries. Some applications may limit the extraction solvents, such as food applications that require safe food-grade solvents, such as ethanol. However, the effect of using ethanol as an extraction solvent on the quality of the extracted polar lipidome, compared to other more traditional methods, is not yet well established. In this study, the polar lipid profile of N. oceanica extracts was obtained using different solvents, including chloroform/methanol (CM), dichloromethane/methanol (DM), dichloromethane/ethanol (DE), and ethanol (E), and evaluated by modern lipidomic methods using LC-MS/MS. Ultrasonic bath (E + USB)- and ultrasonic probe (E + USP)-assisted methodologies were implemented to increase the lipid extraction yields using ethanol. The polar lipid signature and antioxidant activity of DM, E + USB, and E + USP resemble conventional CM, demonstrating a similar extraction efficiency, while the DE and ethanol extracts were significantly different. Our results showed the impact of different extraction solvents in the polar lipid composition of the final extracts and demonstrated the feasibility of E + USB and E + USP as safe and food-grade sources of polar lipids, with the potential for high-added-value biotechnological applications.

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