| Literature DB >> 33385629 |
Yihui Cai1, Yuhuan Liu2, Tongying Liu3, Kaili Gao1, Qi Zhang1, Leipeng Cao1, Yunpu Wang1, Xiaodan Wu1, Hongli Zheng1, Hong Peng1, Roger Ruan4.
Abstract
The high cost of carbon source limits the heterotrophic culture of Chlorella. In this study, broken rice was hydrolyzed into glucose. Then, the broken rice hydrolysate (BRH) was utilized for heterotrophic cultivation of C. vulgaris instead of glucose. Results showed that algal cells released H+ when they consumed NH4+, leading to a sharp decrease in pH. Growth inhibition by acid could be avoided by using a pH buffer. Adding alkaline reagents intermittently during culture could not only reduce the amount of pH stabilizer but also obtain increased biomass production. When using Tris as pH stabilizer, the biomass productivity of C. vulgaris in BRH was the largest (1.01 g/L/d), followed by NaOH (1.00 g/L/d), and Na2CO3 (0.95 g/L/d). Using BRH instead of glucose for heterotrophic cultivation of C. vulgaris could save 89.58% of the cost of culture medium. This study developed a novel strategy for cultivating C. vulgaris heterotrophically using BRH.Entities:
Keywords: Broken rice hydrolysate; Carbon source; Chlorella vulgaris; Heterotrophic culture; Pigment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33385629 DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2020.124607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioresour Technol ISSN: 0960-8524 Impact factor: 9.642