The microbiome of bioreactors containing mass-cultivated marine diatoms for industrial carbon capture and utilization
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35407Date
2024-09-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Aalto, Nerea Johanna; Giæver, Ingeborg Hulda; Eriksen, Gunilla Kristina; Israelsen, Linn; Krsmanovic, Stina; Petters, Sebastian; Bernstein, Hans ChristopherAbstract
Marine microalgae are a promising innovation platform for carbon capture and utilization (CCU) biotechnologies to mitigate industrial greenhouse gas emissions. However, industrial-scale cultivation of algal mono-cultures is challenging and often unscalable. Non-axenic microalgae in large semi-open photobioreactors lead to the co-cultivation of diverse microbial communities. There is limited knowledge about the “bioreactor ecology” involving microalgae interacting with the microbiome and its subsequent impact on process stability and productivity. In this study, we describe the semi-continuous industrial mass cultivation of the cold-adapted marine diatom, Porosira glacialis UiT201, by investigating the prokaryotic and microeukaryotic (phytoplankton and heterotrophic protist) communities. Data were collected in two consecutive time series experiments, representing the initiation and operation of an industrial-scale CCU photobioreactor (300,000 L). The first experiment experienced a culture “crash” of the focal strain after 39 days, while the second culture remained stable and “healthy” for 60 days. The results highlight that this mass cultivation system represents a unique industrial marine microbial ecosystem. The succession of the prokaryotic community was primarily driven by species replacement, indicating turnover due to selective bioreactor conditions and/or biological interactions. Nonetheless, the bioreactor consistently harbors a recurring and abundant core microbiome, suggesting that the closely associated bacterial community is influenced by microalgae-specific properties and can endure a dynamic and variable environment. The observed culture collapse of P. glacialis coincided with changes in the core microbiome structure and different environmental growth conditions compared to the stable and “healthy” experiment. These findings imply that cohabiting microbial taxa within industrial microalgae cultivation likely play a critical role in stabilizing the conversion of industrial CO2 into marine biomass, and changes in community structure serve as an indicator of process stability.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Aalto, Giæver, Eriksen, Israelsen, Krsmanovic, Petters, Bernstein. The microbiome of bioreactors containing mass-cultivated marine diatoms for industrial carbon capture and utilization. Algal Research. 2024;83Metadata
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