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Effects of methanol on cell growth and lipid production from mixotrophic cultivation of Chlorella sp.
Authors:Woon-Yong Choi  Sung-Ho Oh  Yong-Chang Seo  Ga-Bin Kim  Do-Hyung Kang  Shin-Young Lee  Kyung-Hwan Jung  Jeong-Sub Cho  Ju-Hee Ahn  Geun-Pyo Choi  Hyeon-Yong Lee
Institution:1. Department of Biomaterials Engineering, School of Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon, 200-701, Korea
2. Department of Biological Engineering, College of Engineering, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon, 200-701, Korea
3. Korean Ocean Research & Development Institute, Ansan, 426-744, Korea
4. Department of Food and Biotechnology, Chungju University, Chungju, 380-702, Korea
5. DooSan EcoBizNet, Chuncheon, 200-161, Korea
6. Department of Food and Life Science, Gangwon Provincial College, Gangwon, 210-804, Korea
Abstract:The marine microalga Chlorella sp. was cultivated under mixotrophic conditions using methanol as an organic carbon source, which may also act to maintain the sterility of the medium for long-term outdoor cultivation. The optimal methanol concentration was determined to be 1% (v/v) for both cell growth and lipid production when supplying 5% CO2 with 450 μE/m2/sec of continuous illumination. Under these conditions, the maximal cell biomass and total lipid production were 4.2 g dry wt/L and 17.5% (w/w), respectively, compared to 2.2 g dry wt/L and 12.5% (w/w) from autotrophic growth. Cell growth was inhibited at methanol concentrations above 1% (v/v) due to increased toxicity, whereas 1% methanol alone sustained 1.0 g dry wt/L and 4.8% total lipid production. We found that methanol was preferentially consumed during the initial period of cultivation, and carbon dioxide was consumed when the methanol was depleted. A 12:12 h (light:dark) cyclic illumination period produced favorable cell growth (3.6 g dry wt/L). Higher lipid production was observed with cyclic illumination than with continuous illumination (18.6% (w/w) vs 17.5% (w/w)), and better lipid production was also obtained under mixotrophic rather than autotrophic conditions. Interestingly, under mixotrophic conditions with 12:12 (h) cyclic illumination, high proportions of C16:0, C18:0, and C18:1 were observed, which are beneficial for biodiesel production. These results strongly indicate that the carbon source is important for controlling both lipid composition and cell growth under mixotrophic conditions, and they suggest that methanol could be utilized to scale up production to an open pond type system for outdoor cultivation where light illumination changes periodically.
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