Login / Signup

Marine microalgae co-cultured with floc-forming bacterium: Insight into growth and lipid productivity.

Chin Sze YeeTosin Victor OkomodaFakriah HashimKhor WaihoSiti Rozaimah Sheikh AbdullahCosmas AlamanjoHassimi Abu HasanEmienour Muzalina MustafaNor Azman Kasan
Published in: PeerJ (2021)
This study investigated the effect of co-culturing microalgae with a floc-forming bacterium. Of the six microalgae isolated from a biofloc sample, only Thalassiosira weissflogii, Chlamydomonas sp. and Chlorella vulgaris were propagated successfully in Conway medium. Hence, these species were selected for the experiment comparing microalgae axenic culture and co-culture with the floc-forming bacterium, Bacillus infantis. Results obtained showed that the co-culture had higher microalgae biomass compared to the axenic culture. A similar trend was also observed concerning the lipid content of the microalgae-bacterium co-cultures. The cell number of B. infantis co-cultured with T. weissflogii increased during the exponential stage until the sixth day, but the other microalgae species experienced a significant early reduction in cell density of the bacteria at the exponential stage. This study represents the first attempt at co-culturing microalgae with B. infantis, a floc-forming bacterium, and observed increased biomass growth and lipid accumulation compared to the axenic culture.
Keyphrases
  • anaerobic digestion
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • endothelial cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • climate change
  • fatty acid