Improvement of Chemical Composition of Grown Mixotrophically under Nitrogen Depletion towards Biodiesel Production.

Molecules

Biological Sciences Department, Rabigh-Faculty of Science & Arts, King Abdulaziz University, P. O. Box 344, Rabigh 21911, Saudi Arabia.

Published: October 2020

In the present study, the marine microalga was cultivated mixotrophically in F2 growth medium with sodium acetate as exogenous carbon source. The medium was composed of different concentrations of nitrogen to determine the impact of nitrogen depletion on cellular growth and chemical composition. Nitrogen depletion led to severely decreased growth and protein content. However, mild nitrogen depletion (0.22 mM NaNO) led to maximum lipid yield. The fatty acid methyl ester profile also showed increased unsaturation as the nitrogen content decreased. Growth in nitrogen-free medium increased the proportions of mono- and poly-unsaturated fatty acids, while the proportion of saturated fatty acids decreased. Growth under all tested nitrogen levels showed undetectable fatty acids with ≥4 double bonds, indicating these fatty acids had oxidative stability. In addition, all tested nitrogen concentrations led to specific gravity, kinematic viscosity, iodine value, and cetane number that meet the standards for Europe and the U.S.A. However, growth in the presence of nitrogen deficiency enhanced the higher heating value of the resulting biodiesel, a clear advantage from the perspective of energy efficiency. Thus, mixotrophic cultivation of with nitrogen limitation provides a promising approach to achieve high lipid productivity and production of high-quality biodiesel.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7587180PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25204609DOI Listing

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