Literature DB >> 18275465

Bioenergetic changes in the microalgal photosynthetic apparatus by extremely high CO2 concentrations induce an intense biomass production.

Aikaterini Papazi1, Pavlos Makridis, Pascal Divanach, Kiriakos Kotzabasis.   

Abstract

Unicellular green alga Chlorella minutissima, grown under extreme carbon dioxide concentrations (0.036-100%), natural temperature and light intensities (Mediterranean conditions), strongly increase the microalgal biomass through photochemical and non-photochemical changes in the photosynthetic apparatus. Especially, CO(2) concentrations up to 10% enhance the density of active reaction centers (RC/CS(o)), decrease the antenna size per active reaction center (ABS/RC), decrease the dissipation energy (DI(o)/RC) and enhance the quantum yield of primary photochemistry (F(v)/F(m)). Higher CO(2) concentrations (20-25%) combine the above-mentioned photochemical changes with enhanced non-photochemical quenching of surplus energy, which leads to an enhanced steady-state fraction of 'open' (oxidized) PSII reaction centers (q(p)), and minimize the excitation pressure of PSII (1 - q(p)) under very high light intensities (approximately 1700 micromol m(-2) s(-1) maximal value), avoiding the photoinhibition and leading to an enormous biomass production (approximately 2500%). In conclusion, these extreme CO(2) concentrations - about 1000 times higher than the ambient one - can be easily metabolized from the unicellular green alga to biomass and can be used, on a local scale at least, for the future development of microalgal photobioreactors for the mitigation of the factory-produced carbon dioxide.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18275465     DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-3054.2007.01015.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Plant        ISSN: 0031-9317            Impact factor:   4.500


  5 in total

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2.  High pCO2-induced exopolysaccharide-rich ballasted aggregates of planktonic cyanobacteria could explain Paleoproterozoic carbon burial.

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Review 3.  Electromagnetic biostimulation of living cultures for biotechnology, biofuel and bioenergy applications.

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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2009-11-20       Impact factor: 6.208

4.  Biomass production potential of a wastewater alga Chlorella vulgaris ARC 1 under elevated levels of CO₂and temperature.

Authors:  Senthil Chinnasamy; Balasubramanian Ramakrishnan; Ashish Bhatnagar; Keshav C Das
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2009-02-05       Impact factor: 5.923

5.  Effects of influent C/N ratios and treatment technologies on integral biogas upgrading and pollutants removal from synthetic domestic sewage.

Authors:  Jie Xu; Xue Wang; Shiqing Sun; Yongjun Zhao; Changwei Hu
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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