Abstract

In this study, we investigated oxidative stress in the green microalgae, Chlorella sorokiniana, in co-culture with the plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB), Azospirillum brasilense. This relationship was studied in the absence of an exogenous stressor, under copper stress, and under nitrogen limitation stress. We confirmed that copper and nitrogen limitation induced algal oxidative stress and reductions in chlorophyll content. In all cases, the presence of A. brasilense lowered the accumulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) while promoting chlorophyll content. This effect was driven, in part, by A. brasilense’s secretion of the auxin hormone, indole-3-acetic acid, which is known to mitigate stress in higher plants. The findings of the present study show that stress mitigation by A. brasilense resulted in suppressed starch accumulation under nitrogen limitation stress and neutral lipid accumulation under copper stress. In fact, A. brasilense could almost completely mitigate oxidative stress in C. sorokiniana resulting from nitrogen limitation, with ROS accumulation rates comparable to the axenic control cultures. The biotechnological implication of these findings is that co-culture strategies with A. brasilense (and similar PGPB) are most effective for high growth applications. A second growth stage may be needed to induce accumulation of desired products.

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