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Research Article

Effect of urea on growth and biochemical composition of Porphyridium purpureum (Rhodophyta) and scaling-up under non-optimal outdoor conditions

, ORCID Icon &
Pages 572-581 | Received 24 Dec 2020, Accepted 06 Jul 2021, Published online: 27 Jul 2021
 

ABSTRACT

The goal of this study was to determine the effect of urea on the growth and accumulation of commercially important metabolites (lipids, proteins, fatty acids and phycoerythrin) and antioxidant activity in the red microalga of commercial interest Porphyridium purpureum. One-litre cultures were established containing 140 mg N l–1 or 400 mg N l–1, using nitrate (potassium nitrate) or urea as nitrogen source. Urea was as suitable as nitrate as the nitrogen source for P. purpureum. The nitrogen source significantly affected lipid but not protein content in P. purpureum, whereas nitrogen concentration significantly affected protein and lipid content, with the highest values obtained under 30 mM potassium nitrate and 14.8 mM urea (= 400 mg N l–1). Phycoerythrin content was not affected by nitrogen source or concentration in the culture. Considering the economic convenience of urea as a nitrogen source, the strain was scaled-up outdoors in Concepción, Chile (Mediterranean climate), in a closed tubular photobioreactor and an open raceway pond (350 and 700 litres, respectively) with 14.8 mM urea. Biomass production was about four times lower in outdoor systems than in 1-litre cultures; however, results were comparable to other large-scale trials. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using urea as a low-cost nitrogen source for P. purpureum culture and the viability of growing this species outdoors in Central-Southern Chile, where climate conditions are not traditionally considered suitable for setting up commercial microalgal cultures.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Victor González for technical support in fatty acid quantification and Dr. Diego López Alonso, University of Almería, Spain, who donated the strain used in this study to our university in 1998.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s website.

Additional information

Funding

This study was funded by the Consortium ALGAEFUELS, grant 09CTEI6861-04, supported by the Chilean Economic Development Agency (CORFO), the Ministry of Energy of the Chilean Government and private companies.

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