Abstract

Microalgae have great prospects as a sustainable resource of lipids for refinement into nutraceuticals and biodiesel, which increases the need for detailed insights into their intracellular lipid synthesis/storage mechanisms. As an alternative strategy to solvent- and label-based lipid quantification techniques, we introduce time-gated coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) microscopy for monitoring lipid contents in living algae, despite strong autofluorescence from the chloroplasts, at approximately picogram and subcellular levels by probing inherent molecular vibrations. Intracellular lipid droplet synthesis was followed in Phaeodactylum tricornutum algae grown under (1) light/nutrient-replete (control [Ctrl]), (2) light-limited (LL), and (3) nitrogen-starved (NS) conditions. Good correlation (r(2) = 0.924) was found between lipid volume data yielded by CARS microscopy and total fatty acid content obtained from gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. In Ctrl and LL cells, micron-sized lipid droplets were found to increase in number throughout the growth phases, particularly in the stationary phase. During more excessive lipid accumulation, as observed in NS cells, promising commercial harvest as biofuels and nutritional lipids, several micron-sized droplets were present already initially during cultivation, which then fused into a single giant droplet toward stationary phase alongside with new droplets emerging. CARS microspectroscopy further indicated lower lipid fluidity in NS cells than in Ctrl and LL cells, potentially due to higher fatty acid saturation. This agreed with the fatty acid profiles gathered by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. CARS microscopy could thus provide quantitative and semiqualitative data at the single-cell level along with important insights into lipid-accumulating mechanisms, here revealing two different modes for normal and excessive lipid accumulation.

Highlights

  • The accumulation of lipids in microalgae is currently a field of intense research: with their high photosynthetic efficiency and rapid growth rates, these organisms hold great potential both for sustainable production of biofuels (Chisti, 2007) and as a nutrition source

  • The final cell concentration was 2.3 3 107 cells mL21 for Ctrl cultivation, 1.9 3 107 cells mL21 for LL cultivation, and 1.5 3 107 cells mL21 for NS cultivation at the last coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) measurement day when the cultures were in stationary phase

  • Our results show that time-gated CARS microscopy is a promising technique to study lipid synthesis in microalgae, using P. tricornutum as a model organism

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Summary

Introduction

The accumulation of lipids in microalgae is currently a field of intense research: with their high photosynthetic efficiency and rapid growth rates, these organisms hold great potential both for sustainable production of biofuels (Chisti, 2007) and as a nutrition source (de Jesus Raposo et al, 2013). Some microalgae accumulate lipids, mainly triacylglycerols, in intracellular droplets (De Martino et al, 2011; White et al, 2012) One such microalga is Phaeodactylum tricornutum, a unicellular photoautotrophic diatom and a well-studied model organism. We introduce CARS microscopy with time-gated detection, enabling the identification of subpicogram lipid-rich regions in the vicinity of strongly autofluorescent chloroplasts. This is important because cellular storage lipids in algae are primarily synthesized in the chloroplasts and budded off from the envelope membranes as nascent lipid droplets (Fan et al, 2011). We further illustrate the potential to assess whether the different growth conditions promote the synthesis of more PUFAs by detecting shifts in lipid fluidity and saturation per individual lipid droplet from CARS C-H vibration ratio images

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