Abstract

Improving acid tolerance is pivotal to the development of microalgal feedstock for converting flue gas to biomass or oils. In the industrial oleaginous microalga Nannochloropsis oceanica, transcript knockdown of a cytosolic carbonic anhydrase (CA2), which is a key Carbon Concentrating Mechanism (CCM) component induced under 100 ppm CO2 (very low carbon, or VLC), results in ∼45%, ∼30% and ∼40% elevation of photosynthetic oxygen evolution rate, growth rate and biomass accumulation rate respectively under 5% CO2 (high carbon, or HC), as compared to the wild type. Such high-CO2-level activated biomass over-production is reproducible across photobioreactor types and cultivation scales. Transcriptomic, proteomic and physiological changes of the mutant under high CO2 (HC; 5% CO2) suggest a mechanism where the higher pH tolerance is coupled to reduced biophysical CCM, sustained pH hemostasis, stimulated energy intake and enhanced photosynthesis. Thus “inactivation of CCM” can generate hyper-CO2-assimilating and autonomously containable industrial microalgae for flue gas-based oil production.

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