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1.
Botryococcus braunii is a green microalga capable of producing large amounts of external long-chain hydrocarbons suitable as a source of biofuel. There have been several studies indicating that cultures of B. braunii can reduce the energy and water requirement for mass biofuel production, especially if non-destructive extraction methods for milking hydrocarbons are used. Growing microalgae as a raw material for biofuel using conventional liquid-based cultivation (i.e., raceway ponds) has yet to be shown to be economically successful. An alternative solid growth (biofilm) cultivation method can markedly reduce the energy requirements and costs associated with the harvesting and dewatering processes. We evaluated the growth of biofilms of several strains of B. braunii (from races A, B, L and S) and found that three of the four tested races successfully grew to stationary phase in 10 weeks with no contamination. Among all races, B. braunii BOT22 (race B) reached the highest biomass and lipid yields (3.80 mg dry weight cm?2 day?1 and 1.11 mg dry weight cm?2). Irrespective of the race, almost all photosynthetic parameters (F V /F 0 , PIABS and the OJIP curve) showed that the biofilm cultures were more stressed during lag and stationary phases than in logarithmic phase. We also studied the Botryococcus biofilm profiles using confocal microscopy and found that this method is suitable for estimating the overall biomass yield when compared with gravimetric measurement. In conclusion, the growth characteristics (biomass and lipid) and photosynthetic performance of all races indicated that B. braunii BOT22 is the most promising strain for biofilm cultivation.  相似文献   

2.
Echinenone production of a dark red-coloured strain of Botryococcus braunii   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Echinenone has been used as an edible orange pigment, antioxidant and provitamin A. An echinenone-accumulating strain, BOT-20, of Botryococcus braunii was isolated from freshwater environments in Japan. The B. braunii BOT-20 strain is different from other strains of B. braunii, as it appeared dark red during its growth in the laboratory culture as opposed to green. The biomass of the strain was 1.9?g?L?1 at 1?month after cultivation. The n-hexane/acetone (3:1, v/v) extract of the strain was 45.5% of the dry biomass weight and consisted of carotenoids (92%, of which 73% was echinenone) and hydrocarbons (8%). The echinenone content was 30.5% of the dry biomass weight, and production was 630?mg?L?1. Hydrocarbons comprised only 3.7% of the total dry biomass weight. The main component of hydrocarbon was an analogue of botryococene by 1H and 13C NMR. With high values of echinenone content and production, the B. braunii strain BOT-20 is expected to be a new bioresource for the commercial production of echinenone.  相似文献   

3.
4.
To improve biomass and microalgal oil production of Botryococcus braunii, fed‐batch culture was investigated in an airlift photobioreactor. The optimal feeding time of the fed‐batch culture was after 15 days of cultivation, where 1.82 g/L of the microalgal biomass was obtained in the batch culture. Nitrate nutrient was the restrictive factor for the fed‐batch cultivation while phosphate nutrient with high concentration did not affect the microalgal growth. The optimal mole ratio of nitrate to phosphate was 34.7:1, where nitrate concentration reached the initial level and phosphate concentration was one quarter of its initial level. With one feeding, the biomass of B. braunii reached 2.56 g/L after 18 days. Two feedings in 2‐day interval enhanced the biomass production up to 2.87 g/L after 19 days of cultivation. The hydrocarbon content in dry biomass of B. braunii kept at high level of 64.3% w/w. Compared with the batch culture, biomass production and hydrocarbon productivity of B. braunii were greatly improved by the strategic fed‐batch cultivation.  相似文献   

5.
The growth and total lipid content of four green microalgae (Chlorella sp., Chlorella vulgaris CCAP211/11B, Botryococcus braunii FC124 and Scenedesmus obliquus R8) were investigated under different culture conditions. Among the various carbon sources tested, glucose produced the largest biomass or microalgae grown heterotrophically. It was found that 1 % (w/v) glucose was actively utilized by Chlorella sp., C. vulgaris CCAP211/11B and B. braunii FC124, whereas S. obliquus R8 preferred 2 % (w/v) glucose. No significant difference in biomass production was noted between heterotrophic and mixotrophic (heterotrophic with light illumination/exposure) growth conditions, however, less production was observed for autotrophic cultivation. Total lipid content in cells increased by approximately two-fold under mixotrophic cultivation with respect to heterotrophic and autotrophic cultivation. In addition, light intensity had an impact on microalgal growth and total lipid content. The highest total lipid content was observed at 100 μmol m?2s?1 for Chlorella sp. (22.5 %) and S. obliquus R8 (23.7 %) and 80 μmol m?2s?1 for C. vulgaris CCAP211/11B (20.1 %) and B. braunii FC124 (34.9 %).  相似文献   

6.
《Biomass》1989,18(1):59-67
Experience accumulated during the past few years indicates that the main problems in the large-scale cultivation of algae in open ponds are low productivity and contamination. Thus, the use of closed systems can be an alternative method of cultivation. In the present study, a closed system made of polyethylene sleeves was compared with open ponds with respect to growth and polysaccharide production of two species of Porphyridium: Porphyridium sp. and P. aerugineum. For both species, cell number, biomass, and polysaccharide production were higher in the sleeves than in the ponds. It seems that polyethylene sleeves have the following advantages over open ponds: high light availability, high rate of heating and cooling, improved turbulence, relative lack of contamination, and prevention of evaporation and hence of fluctuation in salinity.  相似文献   

7.
Some of the key reasons for why the production of biofuels from microalgae have not yet succeeded as a source of sustainable transport fuel are the costs involved and the amount of energy needed to obtain the oils compared to the energy contained in the final fuel. The key energy costs are in the dewatering of biomass followed by extraction of the oil, disposal of biomass, and the energy content of the nutrient fertiliser needed for regrowing the algae. In this study, we bypass all of these barriers by using a different approach towards cutting energy and fertiliser costs in the production of biofuels from microalgae—rather than growing the algae in the presence of fertilisers such as N and P, followed by harvesting the whole algae cells, and the energetically costly drying of cells and extraction of the fuel from the cells, this process makes use of the natural tendency of the green alga, Botryococcus braunii to release oils from the cell into the extracellular matrix during and after growth. Here, we non-destructively and repeatedly harvest the external oil (hydrocarbons) from B. braunii CCAP 807/2. Extraction with several solvents showed that hexane was not compatible with B. braunii, but that heptane in contact with B. braunii for less than 20 min did not negatively affect this alga. As an alternative, solvent-free method, we tested physical methods of extracting the extracellular oil. Light and temperature did not affect the extraction of the external oil from Botryococcus, but gentle pressure (i.e. ‘blotting’) was an effective method for external oil recovery. Less than 1 h of blotting also did not affect the physiology of Botryococcus. Both the heptane extraction and the non-destructive ‘blotting’ methods had no significant effect on growth and photosynthesis (F v/F m, ETRmax) of B. braunii. Our results indicate that over a period of 6 days, we can repeatedly extract over 35 % (using heptane) and 1 % (using ‘blotting’) of the total oil, mainly in the form of external hydrocarbon in stationary phase cells without damage to the cells.  相似文献   

8.
The green colonial alga Botryococcus braunii is characterized by the ability to produce and accumulate large amounts of hydrocarbons. We isolated and established an axenic clonal strain of B. braunii B70 and investigated the effects of organic carbon sources, including glucose, mannose, fructose, galactose, or acetate, on growth under light and dark conditions. This algal strain had the capacity to grow photo-, mixo-, or heterotrophically. Growth was promoted substantially following exposure of the algae to glucose or mannose under light exposure. Cells could grow under continuous darkness with glucose or mannose. In the presence of glucose under light or dark conditions, cell and colony size, and the intracellular granules containing oil, were markedly larger than those cultured without glucose.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The green colonial alga Botryococcus braunii has unusually high levels of hydrocarbons. Two distinct sites of hydrocarbon accumulation are present in the species: an internal pool present in cytoplasmic inclusions and an external pool in the trilaminar outer walls and associated globules. It is generally assumed that the hydrocarbons are produced within the cells and then excreted into the external pool to maintain the intracellular content at a normal value. Various feeding experiments showed, however, that the radioactivity of the external pool is much higher than the internal one. On the other hand, there was no decrease in the labelling of internal hydrocarbons in chase experiments. Therefore, an excretory process apparently does not take place in B. braunii. The outer wall, therefore, is the main site of hydrocarbon accumulation and also the place where the bulk of B. braunii hydrocarbons are produced. The outer wall also is involved in the matrix of colony formation and the above findings account for the sharp decrease of hydrocarbon production which is associated with the loss of colonial habit. The cultures were also shown to be unable, under usual growth conditions, to catabolize their own hydrocarbons. Such a feature, along with the extracellular location of the main site of production, may account for the abnormally high content of hydrocarbons typical of B. braunii.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of different photoperiods: 24 h illumination and a 12:12-h light/dark (12L:12D) cycle on the growth rate and biomass productivity was studied in five algal species: Neochloris conjuncta, Neochloris terrestris, Neochloris texensis, Botryococcus braunii and Scenedesmus obliquus. The green microalgae examined differ in the reproduction mode. Continuous illumination stimulated the growth of B. braunii and S. obliquus more effectively than the growth of the microalgal species from the genus Neochloris. However, under shorter duration of light of the same intensity (12L:12D cycle), the growth of all the three species of Neochloris was stimulated. Under continuous illumination, the specific growth rate in the first phase of B. braunii and S. obliquus cultures was higher than the growth rate of Neochloris, whereas under the 12L:12D cycle, the specific growth rate of all the three Neochloris species was generally higher than that in B. braunii and S. obliquus. As a result, the light regime influenced algal biomass productivity differently. The maximum biomass productivity was obtained in B. braunii and S. obliquus cultures carried out at continuous illumination. All the Neochloris species produced biomass more efficiently at the 12L:12D cycle, which was two–threefold higher than that of B. braunii and S. obliquus. The unicellular species of the green microalgae from the genus Neochloris, examined for the first time in this study, are promising prospective objects for algal biotechnology.  相似文献   

12.
Botryococcus braunii (Chlorophyta, Botryococcaceae) is a colony-forming green microalga that produces large amounts of liquid hydrocarbons, which can be converted into transportation fuels. There are three different races of B. braunii, A, B, and L, that are distinguished based on the type of hydrocarbon each produces. Each race also has many strains that are distinguished by the location from which they were collected. While B. braunii has been well studied for the chemistry of the hydrocarbon production, very little is known about the molecular biology of B. braunii. To begin to address this problem, we determined the genome size of the A race, Yamanaka strain, and the L race, Songkla Nakarin strain, of B. braunii. Flow cytometry analysis indicates that the A race of B. braunii has a genome size of 166.0 ± 0.4 Mb, while the L race has a substantially larger genome size at 211.3 ± 1.7 Mb. We also used phylogenetic analysis with the nuclear small subunit (18S) rRNA gene to classify strains of the A and B races that have not yet been compared evolutionarily to previously published B. braunii phylogenetics. The analysis suggests that the evolutionary relationship between B. braunii races is correlated with the type of liquid hydrocarbon they produce.  相似文献   

13.
As a potential source of biofuel, the green colonial microalga Botryococcus braunii produces large amounts of hydrocarbons that are accumulated in the extracellular matrix. Generally, pretreatment such as drying or heating of wet algae is needed for sufficient recoveries of hydrocarbons from B. braunii using organic solvents. In this study, the Showa strain of B. braunii was cultured in media derived from the modified Chu13 medium by supplying artificial seawater, natural seawater, or NaCl. After a certain period of culture in the media with an osmotic pressure corresponding to 1/4-seawater, hydrocarbon recovery rates exceeding 90% were obtained by simply mixing intact wet algae with n-hexane without any pretreatments and the results using the present culture conditions indicate the potential for hydrocarbon milking.

Highlights

Seawater was used for efficient hydrocarbon extraction from Botryococcus braunii. The alga was cultured in media prepared with seawater or NaCl. Hydrocarbon recovery rate exceeding 90% was obtained without any pretreatment.  相似文献   

14.
We report the genome size and the GC content, and perform a phylogenetic analysis on Botryococcus braunii Kütz., a green, colony‐forming, hydrocarbon‐rich alga that is an attractive source for biopetroleum. While the chemistry of the hydrocarbons produced by the B race of B. braunii has been studied for many years, there is a deficiency of information concerning the molecular biology of this alga. In addition, there has been some discrepancy as to the phylogenetic placement of the Berkeley (or Showa) strain of the B race. To clarify its classification, we isolated the Berkeley strain nuclear SSU (18S) rRNA gene and β‐actin cDNA and used these sequences for phylogenetic analysis to determine that the Berkeley strain belongs to the Trebouxiophyceae class. This finding is in agreement with other B races of B. braunii, indicating the Berkeley strain is a true B race of B. braunii. To better understand molecular aspects of B. braunii, we obtained the Berkeley strain genome size as a first step in genome sequencing. Using flow cytometry, we determined the B. braunii Berkeley genome size to be 166.2 ± 2.2 Mb. We also estimated the GC content of the Berkeley strain as 54.4 ± 1.2% for expressed gene sequences.  相似文献   

15.
The green unicellular alga Botryococcus braunii shows unusually high concentrations of non-isoprenoid very long chain hydrocarbons. The structure of such hydrocarbons, the relative efficiency of various long chain fatty acids as precursors, the relationship between fatty acid and hydrocarbon concentrations (over the different physiological stages of the alga achieved during batch cultures) and the preferential localization of fatty acids lead to the conclusion that all the major non-isoprenoid hydrocarbons of B. braunii derive from the same direct precursor, oleic acid. Feeding experiments, using doubly labelled oleic acid, show that the whole carbon chain of the latter is incorporated into final hydrocarbons; accordingly such compounds do not originate from a head-to-head condensation mechanism with oleic acid acting as donor. Various features (regarding chiefly the systematic occurrence of a terminal double bond in B. braunii hydrocarbon, their close specific activities after feeding and the large inhibition in their production achieved using dithioerythritol) show that the biosynthesis of B. braunii hydrocarbons probably takes place via an elongation-decarboxylation mechanism related to that operating in some higher plants.  相似文献   

16.
The outer walls of the green alga Botryococcus braunii (main sites of hydrocarbon production and accumulation) show a complex constitution. They comprise a biopolymer highly resistant to non-oxidative degradation. The resistant polymer accounts for ca 9% of the cell dry wt and appears, along with hydrocarbons, as one of the major constituents of the alga. In addition to chemical resistance, B. braunii polymer exhibits other properties: mode of deposition and fluorescence, often used to identify sporopollenins. (Class of wall components generally regarded as originating from polymerization of carotenoid derivatives.) Nevertheless further studies, using IR spectroscopy and high resolution 13C NMR of solids, along with determination of elemental composition and unsaturation levels, indicate that the bulk of the resistant polymer from B. braunii outer walls does not derive from carotenoids; accordingly it cannot be considered, in this respect, as a sporopollenin. In fact the information obtained on the structure of this important constituent of the alga is consistent with its formation via oxidative polymerization of B. braunii dienic hydrocarbons.  相似文献   

17.
The green alga Botryococcus braunii is widely recognized as a source of non-fossil oil. However, limitations in Botryococcus biomass production hamper its commercial exploitation. This study examines the effects of nutrients (nitrogen and iron) and environmental conditions (temperature, light intensity and photoperiod) on biomass and oil production in two B. braunii Race B strains, Kossou-4 and Overjuyo-3. The highest biomass and oil production were obtained at a nitrogen concentration of 750 mg l?1, iron concentration of 6 mg l?1, at 25°C and at 135 µmol photons m?2 s?1 with a photoperiod of 16 h light:8 h darkness. Culturing the strains in Blue-green (BG11) medium containing optimized nutrients under optimal conditions resulted in an up to ~10.6-fold increase in biomass. In Kossou-4 and Overjuyo-3 strains, biomass increased from 1.647 g 10 l?1 and 3.137 g 10 l?1 respectively in normal BG11 medium to 17.390 g 10 l?1 and 21.721 g 10 l?1 in optimized BG11 media and growth conditions. This was accompanied by ~8–10.5-fold increase in oil production compared with that in normal BG11 medium. Oil (0.324 g 10 l?1 and 0.211 g 10 l?1) was produced in normal BG11 medium in Kossou-4 and Overjuyo-3 strains respectively, compared with 2.642 g 10 l?1 (Kossou-4) and 2.206 g 10 l?1 (Overjuyo-3) in modified BG11 media under optimized conditions. Therefore, optimization of nutrients and environmental conditions can increase biomass and oil production in the two strains of B. braunii.  相似文献   

18.
To understand the potential of cultivating Botryococcus braunii with flue gas (normally containing high CO2) for biofuel production, growth characteristics of B. braunii 765 with 2-20% CO2 aeration were investigated. The results showed that the strain could grow well without any obvious inhibition under all tested CO2 concentrations with an aeration rate of 0.2 vvm, even without any culture pH adjustment (ranged from 6.0 to 8.0). The maximum biomass among all conditions was 2.31 g L−1 on 25th day at 20% CO2. Hydrocarbon content and algal colony size increased with the increase of CO2 concentration. A negative correlation between algal biomass and culture total phosphorus was observed (from −0.828 to −0.911, < 0.01). Additionally, 2% sodium hypochlorite solution was used for photobioreactor sterilization to cultivate B. braunii.  相似文献   

19.
The green microalga Botryococcus braunii (B. braunii), race B, was cultured under light-emitting diode (LED) irradiation with and without violet light. This study examined the effect of violet light on hydrocarbon recovery and production in B. braunii. C34 botryococcene hydrocarbons were efficiently extracted by thermal pretreatments at lower temperatures when the alga was cultured without violet light. The hydrocarbon content was also higher (approximately 3%) in samples cultured without violet light. To elucidate the mechanism of effective hydrocarbon recovery and production, we examined structural components of the extracellular matrix (ECM). The amounts of extracellular carotenoids and water-soluble polymers extracted by thermal pretreatment from the ECM were decreased when the alga was cultured without violet light. These results indicate that LED irradiation without violet light is more effective for hydrocarbon recovery and production in B. braunii. Furthermore, structural ECM components are closely involved in hydrocarbon recovery and production in B. braunii.  相似文献   

20.
The B race of a green microalga Botryococcus braunii Kützing produces triterpene hydrocarbons that is a promising source for biofuel. In this algal race, precursors of triterpene hydrocarbons are provided from the 2-C-methyl-d-erythritol 4-phosphate (MEP) pathway. The terminal enzyme of this pathway, 4-hydroxy-3-methylbut-2-enyl diphosphate reductase (HDR) is regarded as one of the key enzymes that affect yields of products in terpene biosynthesis. In order to better understand the MEP pathway of the alga, cDNA and genomic clones of HDR were obtained from B. braunii Showa strain. B. braunii HDR (BbHDR) is encoded on a single copy gene including a 1509-bp open reading frame that was intervened by 6 introns. The exon–intron structure of BbHDR genes did not show clear relation to phylogeny, while its amino acid sequence reflected phyla and classes well. BbHDR sequence was distinctive from that of the HDR protein from Escherichia coli in the residues involved in hydrogen-bond network that surrounds substrate. Introduction of BbHDR cDNA into an E. coli HDR deficient mutant resulted in recovery of its auxotrophy. BbHDR expression level was upregulated from the onset of liquid culture to the 24th day after inoculation with a 2.5-fold increase and retained its level in the subsequent period.  相似文献   

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