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Growth and Cell Size of Microalga Auxenochlorella protothecoides AS-1 under Different Trophic Modes

Microorganisms 2024 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Haoyu Chen, Ana Sosa, Feng Chen

Summary

Researchers compared the growth performance of a microalgal strain isolated from microplastic biofilm under different nutritional conditions. The study found that Auxenochlorella protothecoides AS-1 grew most effectively under mixotrophic conditions, reaching high biomass in just six days, suggesting potential applications in biotechnology and bioremediation.

Certain microalgal species can grow with different trophic strategies depending on the availability of nutrient resources. They can use the energy from light or an organic substrate, or both, and can therefore be called autotrophs, heterotrophs, or mixotrophs. We recently isolated a microalgal strain from the microplastic biofilm, which was identified as Auxenochlorella protothecoides, AS-1. Strain AS-1 grew rapidly in bacterial culture media and exhibited different growth rates and cell sizes under different trophic conditions. We compared the growth performance of AS-1 under the three different trophic modes. AS-1 reached a high biomass (>4 g/L) in 6 days under mixotrophic growth conditions with a few organic carbons as a substrate. In contrast, poor autotrophic growth was observed for AS-1. Different cell sizes, including daughter and mother cells, were observed under the different growth modes. We applied a Coulter Counter to measure the size distribution patterns of AS-1 under different trophic modes. We showed that the cell size distribution of AS-1 was affected by different growth modes. Compared to the auto-, hetero- and mixotrophic modes, AS-1 achieved higher biomass productivity by increasing cell number and cell size in the presence of organic substrate. The mechanisms and advantages of having more mother cells with organic substrates are still unclear and warrant further investigations. The work here provides the growth information of a newly isolated A. protothecoides AS-1 which will be beneficial to future downstream applications.

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