AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses challenges in measuring cell growth in cyanobacteria due to issues like self-shading and uneven CO levels in traditional photobioreactors.
  • A new microfluidic platform allows for precise monitoring of cyanobacterial growth, providing uniform light and accurate CO supply at the single-cell level.
  • The research demonstrated that under controlled conditions, cyanobacterial growth is stable with synchronized cell division, but growth ceases quickly in darkness and is limited by low CO levels.

Article Abstract

Quantification of cell growth is central to any study of photoautotrophic microorganisms. However, cellular self-shading and limited CO control in conventional photobioreactors lead to heterogeneous conditions that obscure distinct correlations between the environment and cellular physiology. Here we present a microfluidic cultivation platform that enables precise analysis of cyanobacterial growth with spatio-temporal resolution. Since cyanobacteria are cultivated in monolayers, cellular self-shading does not occur, allowing homogeneous illumination and precise knowledge of the photon-flux density at single-cell resolution. A single chip contains multiple channels, each connected to several hundred growth chambers. In combination with an externally applied light gradient, this setup enables high-throughput multi-parameter analysis in short time. In addition, the multilayered microfluidic design allows continuous perfusion of defined gas mixtures. Transversal CO diffusion across the intermediate polydimethylsiloxane membrane results in homogeneous CO supply, with a unique exchange-surface to cultivation-volume ratio. Three cyanobacterial model strains were examined under various, static and dynamic environmental conditions. Phase-contrast and chlorophyll fluorescence images were recorded by automated time-lapse microscopy. Deep-learning trained cell segmentation was used to efficiently analyse large image stacks, thereby generating statistically reliable data. Cell division was highly synchronized, and growth was robust under continuous illumination but stopped rapidly upon initiating dark phases. CO-Limitation, often a limiting factor in photobioreactors, was only observed when the device was operated under reduced CO between 50 and 0 ppm. Here we provide comprehensive and precise data on cyanobacterial growth at single-cell resolution, accessible for further growth studies and modeling.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4lc00567hDOI Listing

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