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Selenium Incorporation to Amino Acids in Chlorella Cultures Grown in Phototrophic and Heterotrophic Regimes.

Mykola MylenkoDai Long VuJan KutaKarolína RanglováDavid KubáčGergely Ernő LakatosTomáš GrivalskýMartin Pablo CaporgnoJoão Artur da Câmara ManoelJiří KopeckýJiří MasojídekPavel Hrouzek
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2020)
Microalgae accumulate bioavailable selenium-containing amino acids (Se-AAs), and these are useful as a food supplement. While this accumulation has been studied in phototrophic algal cultures, little data exists for heterotrophic cultures. We have determined the Se-AAs content, selenium/sulfur (Se/S) substitution rates, and overall Se accumulation balance in photo- and heterotrophic Chlorella cultures. Laboratory trials revealed that heterotrophic cultures tolerate Se doses ∼8-fold higher compared to phototrophic cultures, resulting in a ∼2-3-fold higher Se-AAs content. In large-scale experiments, both cultivation regimes provided comparable Se-AAs content. Outdoor phototrophic cultures accumulated up to 400 μg g-1 of total Se-AAs and exhibited a high level of Se/S substitution (5-10%) with 30-60% organic/total Se embedded in the biomass. A slightly higher content of Se-AAs and ratio of Se/S substitution was obtained for a heterotrophic culture in pilot-scale fermentors. The data presented here shows that heterotrophic Chlorella cultures provide an alternative for Se-enriched biomass production and provides information on Se-AAs content and speciation in different cultivation regimes.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • clinical trial
  • amino acid
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  • wastewater treatment
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