| Literature DB >> 30488314 |
Eric Concha1, Hermann J Heipieper2, Lukas Y Wick3, Gustavo A Ciudad4, Rodrigo Navia5.
Abstract
Botryococcus braunii is a promising microalga for the production of biofuels and other chemicals because of its high content of internal lipids and external hydrocarbons. However, due to the very thick cell wall of B. braunii, traditional chemical/physical downstream processing very often is not as effective as expected and requires high amounts of energy. In this cases, the application of two-phase aqueous-organic solvent systems could be an alternative to cultivate microalgae allowing for a simultaneous extraction of the valuable compounds without significant negative effects on cell growth. Two-phase systems have been applied before, however, there are no studies so far on the mechanisms used by microalgae to survive in contact with solvents present as a second-phase. In this study, the effects of the solvents limonene, n-decane and n-decanol on growth of the microalga B. braunii as well as the adaptive cell response in terms of their phospholipid fatty acid contents were analized. A concentration-dependent negative effect of all three solvents on cell growth was observed. Effects were accompanied by changes of the membrane fatty acid composition of the alga as manifested by a decrease of the unsaturation . In addition, an association was found between the solvent hydrophobicity (given as log octanol-water partition coefficient ([Formula: see text]) values) and their toxic effects, whereby n-decanol and n-decane emerged as the most and least toxic solvent respectively. Among the tested solvents, the latter promises to be the most suitable for a two-phase extraction system.Entities:
Keywords: Botryococcus braunii; Fatty acid profile; Solvent tolerance; Two-phase system; Unsaturation index
Year: 2018 PMID: 30488314 PMCID: PMC6262068 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-018-0718-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1Effect of different concentrations of limonene (square), n-decanol (circle) and n-decane (triangle) on Botryococcus braunii UTEX LB572 growth, after 24 h solvent-biomass contact. Growth is expressed as a percentage of control samples. Every point is the average of three independent samples. Error bars represent standard error of the mean of the same three samples
Fig. 2Effect of n-decanol, n-decane and limonene on membrane fatty acid profile of Botryococcus braunii UTEX LB572 after 24 h biomass-solvent contact for 5 different concentrations (1 to 5) and control samples (0). The number 1 correspond to the lowest concentration for every solvent, meanwhile number 5 correspond to the highest one. All data represent the average and standard error of the mean of three independent samples
Fig. 3Effect of solvents on membrane fatty acid UI of B. braunii UTEX LB572, after 24 h solvent-biomass contact. Slashed horizontal line show control samples UI in every panel. Every point is the average of three independent samples. Bars show standard error of the mean
Physico-chemical properties of solvents used in the two-phase aqueous-organic system
| Solvents | Molar mass (g/mol) | Maximum water solubility (mM) | Log | Log | MMCd |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decane | 142.29 | 0.000366 | 5.01f | 4.22 | 6 | 1 |
| Limonene | 136.23 | 0.101299 | 4.23g | 3.46 | 294 | |
| 158.28 | 0.230000 | 3.97h | 3.21 | 374 |
and ] were included as references
a Logarithm of octanol-water partition coefficient
b Logarithm of water-membrane partition coefficient
c Calculated according to Sikkema et al. (1994)
d MMC: maximum membrane concentration of solvent. Calculated according to Neumann et al. (2005b)
e Solvent concentration in membrane (M) divided by n-decane concentration in membrane ()
f Data from Mojaat et al. (2008)
g Data from Filipsson et al. (1998)
h Data from Frenz et al. (1989b)