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Synthetic algal-bacteria consortia for space-efficient microalgal growth in a simple hydrogel system

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Martin, Noah 
Bernat, Tatum 
Dinasquet, Julie 
Stofko, Andrea 
Damon, April 

Abstract

Abstract: Photosynthetic microalgae are an attractive source of food, fuel, or nutraceuticals, but commercial production of microalgae is limited by low spatial efficiency. In the present study we developed a simple photosynthetic hydrogel system that cultivates the green microalga, Marinichlorella kaistiae KAS603, together with a novel strain of the bacteria, Erythrobacter sp. We tested the performance of the co-culture in the hydrogel using a combination of chlorophyll-a fluorimetry, microsensing, and bio-optical measurements. Our results showed that growth rates in algal–bacterial hydrogels were about threefold enhanced compared to hydrogels with algae alone. Chlorophyll-a fluorimetry–based light curves found that electron transport rates were enhanced about 20% for algal–bacterial hydrogels compared to algal hydrogels for intermediate irradiance levels. We also show that the living hydrogel is stable under different environmental conditions and when exposed to natural seawater. Our study provides a potential bio-inspired solution for problems that limit the space-efficient cultivation of microalgae for biotechnological applications.

Description

Keywords

Article, Co-culture, Algae-bacteria, Hydrogel, Photosynthesis, Biopolymer, Erythrobacter, Marinichlorella, Synthetic consortia

Journal Title

Journal of Applied Phycology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0921-8971
1573-5176

Volume Title

33

Publisher

Springer Netherlands
Sponsorship
H2020 European Research Council (702911, ERC-2014-STG H2020 639088)
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF4827)