| Literature DB >> 34266439 |
Thomas Kiran Marella1, Raya Bhattacharjya2, Archana Tiwari3.
Abstract
Diatoms are unicellular photosynthetic protists which constitute one of the most successful microalgae contributing enormously to global primary productivity and nutrient cycles in marine and freshwater habitats. Though they possess the ability to biosynthesize high value compounds like eicosatetraenoic acid (EPA), fucoxanthin (Fx) and chrysolaminarin (Chrl) the major bottle neck in commercialization is their inability to attain high density growth. However, their unique potential of acquiring diverse carbon sources via varied mechanisms enables them to adapt and grow under phototrophic, mixotrophic as well as heterotrophic modes. Growth on organic carbon substrates promotes higher biomass, lipid, and carbohydrate productivity, which further triggers the yield of various biomolecules. Since, the current mass culture practices primarily employ open pond and tubular photobioreactors for phototrophic growth, they become cost intensive and economically non-viable. Therefore, in this review we attempt to explore and compare the mechanisms involved in organic carbon acquisition in diatoms and its implications on mixotrophic and heterotrophic growth and biomolecule production and validate how these strategies could pave a way for future exploration and establishment of sustainable diatom biorefineries for novel biomolecules.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon acquisition; Diatoms; Fucoxanthin; Heterotrophy; Mixotrophy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34266439 PMCID: PMC8281487 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-021-01627-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Fig. 1Schematic overview of impact of organic carbon on diatoms and its implications on various value-added product generation and related sustainable development goals
Fig. 2Scheme of pathways involved in organic carbon assimilation and its conversion to functional molecules during heterotrophic and mixotrophic growth in diatoms. Compound abbreviations are. G6P- glyceraldehyde-6-phosphate; G3P- glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate; ACCoA- Acetyl-CoA; TCA cycle-Tricaboxylic acid cycle; FFA; free fatty acids; ER-Endoplasmic reticulum; LB-Lipid bodies
Fig. 3Comparison of growth and lipid production between photo-autotrophic and mixotrophic growth in Cylindrotheca sp. Growth curve of of cultures under different modes (A). Difference in lipid content at stationary phase of growth visualized by nile red staining in cells grown in Mixotrophic (B) and photoautotrophic mode (C)
Effect of different cultivation modes on biomass and functional biomolecule production in diatoms
| Diatom species | Culture Mode | Cultivation techniques | Carbon substrate (optimum concentration)/ growth conditions | Growth rate/Biomass concentration | Functional biomolecule | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Glucose (10 g L− 1 ) | Biomass- 1.72 g L− 1 | Fucoxanthin- 3.38 mg L− 1d− 1; 1.29 % DCW | [ |
|
| Autotrophy | Batch; two stage | Light 200 µE; L:D 14:10 h; High nutrient medium + CO2 | Biomass 1.25 g L− 1 | Higher biomass and Lipid productivity | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Batch | Lactate; Succinate (0.045 M) | Maximum doubling time was 33 and 30 h respectively under each condition | Comparable levels of Chlorophyll a, c; β carotene and fucoxanthin was detected as under light conditions; However, Diadinoxanthin could not be detected | [ |
|
| Mixotrophy | Batch | Glycerol; Acetate | Biomass- 0.8 g L− 1 | naa | [ |
| Autotrophy | Batch |
| Biomass- 0.7 g L− 1 | EPA 24 % of TFA | ||
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Acetic acid; Ethanol; Glucose (1mM) | na | EPA (acetate;14.3 mg g− 1, Ethanol;7.3 mg g− 1 , 10.4 mg g-1 Glucose) | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Batch | Lactate; Succinate; Glucose; Glutamate | Enhanced growth rate - (µ) 0.106 | Enhanced EPA | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Fed-batch ; Fermentor | Glucose | 30 g L− 1 | Total lipid 60% DCW; EPA 2–4 % TFA | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Batch | Glutamate (0.003 to 2mM); Alanine + Glucose; glucose + Amino acids | High growth with Glucose + Glutamate | na | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic Mixotrophic | Batch Batch | Glucose (0.1 M) | 25.4 g L− 1 35.1 g L− 1 | EPA- 5.28 %; Fucoxanthin- 0.08 % of DCW EPA- 6.14 %; Fucoxanthin- 0.22 % of DCW | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic Mixotrophic | Fed-batch; Two stage | Glucose (5 g L− 1 ); Varying light | Biomass 2.22 g L− 1 DCW Biomass 1.91 g L− 1 DCW | Fucoxanthin-0.89 % DCW Fucoxanthin at10µmol m− 2 s − 1 -1.11 % DCW, 5.42 mg L− 1d− 1 | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Fed-batch; Fermenter | Acetate; Glucose | 22.1 g L− 1 | EPA- 0.70 g L− 1 | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Fed-batch; Fermenter | Glucose | 40.0 g L− 1 | EPA- 1.1 g L− 1 | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Batch | Glucose | na | EPA yield (17 mg g− 1 DCW) | [ |
|
| Heterotrophic | Batch | Glutamate (0.16 to 2mM) and Glucose (1.2 mM) | Rapid growth rate; 48 h with glutamate and 24 h with glucose alone | na | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Glycerol (100mM) | Specific growth rate (day− 1)-0.18; Biomass 173 mg L− 1 | Significant increase in respiration rate | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Glycerol (0.02 M) | Promoted growth | Enhanced photorespiration | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Sodium acetate; Starch; Glucose (0.5 to 5 g L− 1) | Maximum biomass- 1.16 gL− 1 | Low glucose content increased the total lipid content and productivity (0.29 g g − 1 and 0.017 g− l d− 1) | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | Fed-batch; PBR | Glycerol (0.1 M) | Biomass − 16.2 g L− 1 DCW ;17.5 mg L− 1 h− 1 | EPA increase − 33.5 mg L− 1 d− 1 | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch; PBR | Enriched ESAW medium + Glycerol | Biomass – 5.3 g L− 1 | EPA 3.98 mg L− 1 d− 1 | |
| Mixotrophy | Batch; PBR | Enriched ESAW medium + Glycerol + HCO3 | Biomass – 11.55 g L− 1 | EPA 9.51 mg L− 1 d− 1; Fx 1.97 mg L− 1 d− 1 | [ | |
| Autotrophy | Batch; PBR | Enriched ESAW medium + Glycerol | Biomass – 1.6 g L− 1 | EPA 1.40 mg L− 1 d− 1 | ||
|
| Mixotrophic | Batch | Glucose (40mM); Glycerol (80mM) | Promoted growth | Enhanced chrysolaminarin, EPA and DHA | [ |
|
| Mixotrophic | na | Crude glycerol (2.5 g L− 1) | Increased biomass- 0.75 g DW L− 1 | Increase in short and long chain fatty acids (C14:0; C18:4(n-3)) | [ |
a Data not available