Flagellate microalgae play an increasingly significant role in environmental management and biotechnology for valuable bioproducts, excellent photosynthetic capability, and autonomic movement. However, multiple flagellate microalgae practically live together in the ocean and lake areas, and they are susceptible to contamination as a result of improper operations. Enthused by these aspects, we develop a reliable inertial microfluidic method to overcome the influence of flagella movement and non-spherical shape on the alignment and isolation of target flagellate microalgae. Firstly, a computational model incorporating fluid-structure interaction was established to investigate influence of releasing position and shape parameters on the displacement and rotation of non-spherical microalgal cells and numerically studied the processes of shape- and size-based particle separation. Secondly, the movement of different-size particles under diverse flow rates in the channel was explored, and the capability of this method was validated by aligning and separating 10 μm and 20 μm polystyrene particles. Thirdly, this method was applied to align H. pluvialis and isolate Dunaliella salina from the mixed microalgal samples to explore the influence of flow rate on the alignment and isolation of flagellate microalgae. Fourthly, this method was engineered to select 20 μm polystyrene particles from three types of particles and isolate H. pluvialis from the mixture of multiple microalgae species. Finally, we leveraged this approach to realize separation of H. pluvialis and Synedra ulna to explore the performance of this method in shape-based cell separation, and we isolated Euglena from microalgal cell wastes, including dead cells, bacteria, and particles. This method has promising prospects to be a reliable tool to isolate target flagellate microalgae to address problematic issues in environmental monitoring, pharmaceutical synthesis, and chronic wound treatment for the advantage of good adaptability and reliability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2024.465509 | DOI Listing |
J Chromatogr A
January 2025
School of Control Engineering, Northeastern University at Qinhuangdao, Qinhuangdao 066004, China; Hebei Key Laboratory of Micro-Nano Precision Optical Sensing and Measurement Technology, Qinhuangdao 066004, China. Electronic address:
Flagellate microalgae play an increasingly significant role in environmental management and biotechnology for valuable bioproducts, excellent photosynthetic capability, and autonomic movement. However, multiple flagellate microalgae practically live together in the ocean and lake areas, and they are susceptible to contamination as a result of improper operations. Enthused by these aspects, we develop a reliable inertial microfluidic method to overcome the influence of flagella movement and non-spherical shape on the alignment and isolation of target flagellate microalgae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Protistol
August 2024
University of Cologne, Institute of Zoology, General Ecology, 50674 Cologne, Germany. Electronic address:
Protists can endure challenging environments sustaining key ecosystem processes of the microbial food webs even under aridic or hypersaline conditions. We studied the diversity of protists at different latitudes of the Atacama Desert by massive sequencing of the hypervariable region V9 of the 18S rRNA gene from soils and microbial mats collected in the Andes. The main protist groups in soils detected in active stage through cDNA were cercozoans, ciliates, and kinetoplastids, while the diversity of protists was higher including diatoms and amoebae in the microbial mat detected solely through DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Protistol
February 2024
Institute of Cytology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg 194064, Russia.
Rhizochromulina marina is a unicellular amoeboid alga capable of forming flagellate cells; it is a single validly named species in the genus. Besides, there are numerous environmental sequences and undescribed strains designated as Rhizochromulina sp. or R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Protistol
October 2023
University of Cologne, Institute of Zoology, General Ecology, 50674 Cologne, Germany. Electronic address:
Cercozoans and heterolobose amoebae are found across terrestrial habitats where they feed on other unicellular microbes, including bacteria, fungi and microalgae. They constitute a significant fraction of soil ecosystems and are integral members of plant microbiota. Here, we present the results on the isolation of protozoans from the rhizosphere and phyllosphere of Browningia candelaris (Meyen) in the Andean Altiplano and Eulychnia taltalensis (F.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
October 2023
Faculty of Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, China.
Mixotrophic flagellates, which have diverse nutritional modes and play important roles in connecting the microbial loop with the classical food chain, are ideal models to study the mechanisms of adaptation between different nutritional modes in protists. In their natural ecosystems, mixotrophic flagellates may encounter microalgal prey of different digestibility, which may affect the carbon flow. To date, a molecular biological view of the metabolic processes in the mixotrophic flagellate during nutritional adaptation and feeding on microalgal prey of different digestibility is still lacking.
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