A new photobioreactor for continuous marennin
production with a marine diatom: influence of the light intensity and the
immobilised-cell matrix (alginate beads or agar layer)
T.
Lebeau, P. Gaudin, R. Moan, J.-M. Robert-2002
Appl
Microbiol Biotechnol, 59: 153-159
Abstract:
In
oyster ponds, the marine diatom Haslea ostrearia synthesises and
excretes a hydrosoluble pigment of commercial interest called marennin.
During the benthic stage, when algal cells are naturally immobilised in
their own polysaccharides, marennin production is higher. To optimise this
production, axenic cultures of H. ostrearia were immobilised in a
polysaccharidic matrix (alginate or agar) and introduced into a new
photobioreactor device for continuous marennin production. Solute diffusion
was improved using an alginate beads monolayer, leading to higher levels of
cell growth (a 2-fold higher cell concentration) and marennin productivity
(7.57-8.80 mg day-1 l-1). An increase in the
light intensity (from 3.0 to 8.5x1016 quanta cm-2 s-1)
led to an earlier and 1.3-fold higher production of marennin. However, the
higher light intensity led to a higher rate of cell death [0.29 instead of
0.40 ng chlorophyll a (106 cells)-1]. Due
to the secondary nature of marennin metabolism, it would be necessary to
alternate between culture conditions favouring cell growth (moderate light
intensity and no limiting nitrate supply) and those promoting marennin
production (high light intensity and limiting nitrate supply).
(Laboratoire
de Biologie Marine, Institut des Substances et des Organismes de la Mer
(ISOmer), Université de Nantes, 2, rue de la Houssinière, BP 92208, 44322
Nantes cedex 3, France, Fax: +33-3-89202345, E-mail: t.lebeau@.uha.fr)