[en] Achieving enhanced lipid yield without compromising biomass is one of the long-standing challenges in our quest to produce algal biofuel sustainably. Multiple factors, including temperature, nutrients and light conditions impact lipid production, however such lipid-enhancing strategies often lead to reduced biomass, thereby offsetting the total volume of lipid recovered. Hydrodynamic cues remain poorly studied, specifically in the context of lipid production in motile algae, concurrently with biomass generation and photo-physiology, a key fitness parameter. By imposing hydrodynamic cues to biophysically stress distinct strains of raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo at specific time points along the growth stages (indicating different nutritional states), we quantify the lipid production, alongside algal biomass and photo-physiology. Early induction (hydrodynamic cues implemented during the lag phase) and delayed induction (hydrodynamic cues implemented during the exponential phase) were studied. Delayed induction of hydrodynamic cues suppressed growth and photo-physiology without significant enhancement of lipid production, however, early induction allowed to significantly increase lipid content, up to 300%, without observable changes in biomass and photo-physiology. Based on this, we propose a hydrodynamic strategy for enhanced lipid production with sustained biomass and physiological fitness. This work presents hydrodynamic perturbation and its onset timing as tunable parameters to advance lipid production technologies across diverse motile species.
Disciplines :
Physical, chemical, mathematical & earth Sciences: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
KAKAVAND, Narges ; University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Physics and Materials Science (DPHYMS)
FNR14063202 - Active Phenomena Across Scales In Biological Systems, 2020 (01/11/2020-30/04/2027) - Massimiliano Esposito
Name of the research project :
R-AGR-3401 - A17/MS/11572821/MBRACE - part UL - SENGUPTA Anupam R-AGR-3692 - C19/MS/13719464/TOPOFLUME - SENGUPTA Anupam
Funders :
FNR - Luxembourg National Research Fund
Funding text :
This work was carried out with the support of the FNR-Luxembourg’s PRIDE Doctoral Training Unit ACTIVE (Active Phenomena Across Scales in Biological Systems, https://cls.uni.lu/doctoral-training/), with additional funding from the University of Luxembourg and the Luxembourg National Research Fund’s ATTRACT Investigator Grant (Grant no. A17/MS/ 11572821/MBRACE to AS) as well as the CORE Grant (Grant no. C19/MS/13719464/ TOPOFLUME/Sengupta to AS). AS gratefully acknowledges the AUDACITY Grant (AUDACITY Grant no.: IAS-20/CAMEOS) from the Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Luxembourg for supporting this work.