Abstract

Chlorella pyrenoidosa was cultivated under photoautotrophic, mixotrophic and cyclic light-autotrophic/dark-heterotrophic conditions. The influence of light on the carbon and energy metabolism of microalgae was investigated by the use of metabolic flux analysis. The respiratory activity of microalgae in the light was assessed from the autotrophic flux distribution. Results showed that the glycolytic pathway, tricarboxylic acid cycle and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation maintained high activities during illumination, indicating little effect of light on these pathways, while the flux through the pentose phosphate pathway during illumination was very small due to the light-mediated regulation. The theoretical yields of biomass on ATP decreased in the following order: heterotrophic culture>mixotrophic culture>autotrophic culture, and a significant amount of the available ATP was required for maintenance processes in microalgal cells. The energy conversion efficiency between the supplied energy to culture, the absorbed energy by cells and the free energy conserved in ATP were analyzed for the different cultures. Analysis showed that the heterotrophic culture generated more ATP from the supplied energy than the autotrophic and mixotrophic cultures. The maximum thermodynamic efficiency of ATP production from the absorbed energy, which was calculated from the metabolic fluxes at zero growth rate, was the highest in the heterotrophic culture and as low as 16% in the autotrophic culture. By evaluating the energy economy through the energy utilization efficiency, it was found that the biomass yield on the supplied energy was the lowest in the autotrophic cultivation, and the cyclic culture gave the most efficient utilization of energy for biomass production.

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