6 research outputs found
Bionic 3D printed corals.
Corals have evolved as optimized photon augmentation systems, leading to space-efficient microalgal growth and outstanding photosynthetic quantum efficiencies. Light attenuation due to algal self-shading is a key limiting factor for the upscaling of microalgal cultivation. Coral-inspired light management systems could overcome this limitation and facilitate scalable bioenergy and bioproduct generation. Here, we develop 3D printed bionic corals capable of growing microalgae with high spatial cell densities of up to 109 cells mL-1. The hybrid photosynthetic biomaterials are produced with a 3D bioprinting platform which mimics morphological features of living coral tissue and the underlying skeleton with micron resolution, including their optical and mechanical properties. The programmable synthetic microenvironment thus allows for replicating both structural and functional traits of the coral-algal symbiosis. Our work defines a class of bionic materials that is capable of interacting with living organisms and can be exploited for applied coral reef research and photobioreactor design
Genome and methylome of the oleaginous diatom Cyclotella cryptica reveal genetic flexibility toward a high lipid phenotype
BACKGROUND: Improvement in the performance of eukaryotic microalgae for biofuel
and bioproduct production is largely dependent on characterization of metabolic
mechanisms within the cell. The marine diatom Cyclotella cryptica, which was
originally identified in the Aquatic Species Program, is a promising strain of
microalgae for large-scale production of biofuel and bioproducts, such as omega-3
fatty acids.
RESULTS: We sequenced the nuclear genome and methylome of this oleaginous diatom
to identify the genetic traits that enable substantial accumulation of
triacylglycerol. The genome is comprised of highly methylated repetitive
sequence, which does not significantly change under silicon starved lipid
induction, and data further suggests the primary role of DNA methylation is to
suppress DNA transposition. Annotation of pivotal glycolytic, lipid metabolism,
and carbohydrate degradation processes reveal an expanded enzyme repertoire in C.
cryptica that would allow for an increased metabolic capacity toward
triacylglycerol production. Identification of previously unidentified genes,
including those involved in carbon transport and chitin metabolism, provide
potential targets for genetic manipulation of carbon flux to further increase its
lipid phenotype. New genetic tools were developed, bringing this organism on a
par with other microalgae in terms of genetic manipulation and characterization
approaches.
CONCLUSIONS: Functional annotation and detailed cross-species comparison of key
carbon rich processes in C. cryptica highlights the importance of enzymatic
subcellular compartmentation for regulation of carbon flux, which is often
overlooked in photosynthetic microeukaryotes. The availability of the genome
sequence, as well as advanced genetic manipulation tools enable further
development of this organism for deployment in large-scale production system