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β-Carotene Production from Dunaliella salina Cultivated with Bicarbonate as Carbon Source.


ABSTRACT: Bicarbonate has been considered as a better approach for supplying CO2 to microalgae cells microenvironments than gas bubbling owing t°Cost-effectiveness and easy operation. However, the β-carotene production was too low in Dunaliella salina cultivated with bicarbonate in previous studies. Also, the difference in photosynthetic efficiency between these tw°Carbon sources (bicarbonate and CO2) has seldom been discussed. In this study, the culture conditions, including NaHCO3, Ca2+, Mg2+ and microelement concentrations, were optimized when bicarbonate was used as carbon source. Under optimized condition, a maximum biomass concentration of 0.71 g/l and corresponding β-carotene content of 4.76% were obtained, with β-carotene yield of 32.0 mg/l, much higher than previous studies with NaHCO3. Finally, these optimized conditions with bicarbonate were compared with CO2 bubbling by online monitoring. There was a notable difference in Fv/Fm value between cultivations with bicarbonate and CO2, but there was no difference in the Fv/Fm periodic changing patterns. This indicates that the high concentration of NaHCO3 used in this study served as a stress factor for β-carotene accumulation, although high productivity of biomass was still obtained.

SUBMITTER: Xi Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9728381 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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β-Carotene Production from <i>Dunaliella salina</i> Cultivated with Bicarbonate as Carbon Source.

Xi Yimei Y   Wang Jinghan J   Xue Song S   Chi Zhanyou Z  

Journal of microbiology and biotechnology 20200601 6


Bicarbonate has been considered as a better approach for supplying CO<sub>2</sub> to microalgae cells microenvironments than gas bubbling owing t°Cost-effectiveness and easy operation. However, the β-carotene production was too low in <i>Dunaliella salina</i> cultivated with bicarbonate in previous studies. Also, the difference in photosynthetic efficiency between these tw°Carbon sources (bicarbonate and CO<sub>2</sub>) has seldom been discussed. In this study, the culture conditions, including  ...[more]

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