Axenisation of oleaginous microalgal cultures via anoxic photosensitisation
Journal article, 2025

Growing interest in sustainable food and biofuel research has necessitated high quality axenic oleaginous microalgal strains. Unfortunately, most strains available in culture banks contain commensal microbes such as bacteria and the default decontamination method involves antibiotic treatment which has begun to exacerbate the emergence of antibiotic resistance. To overcome this problem, anoxic photosensitisation was investigated as an alternate approach. Four oleaginous microalgal species (Tetradesmus obliquus, Desmodesmus armatus, Chlorella vulgaris and Nannochloropsis limnetica) were incubated in varying concentrations of Rose Bengal (0 μM, 1 μM, 3 μM or 9 μM) either in normal (oxic) or anoxic conditions, for 72 h under light (8.85 ± 0.4 W/m2) in a specially designed heterotrophic growth complex (HGC) medium, followed by 72 h in standard Bold's Basal Medium (BBM). Commonly used antibiotics-based protocol was used as the control method. Post treatment, cell numbers and percentage populations were counted with Flow Cytometry, and viability was tested using standard plating methods using BBM and LB. Additionally, the contaminating microbes in the cultures were profiled using 16Ss rRNA sequencing. Anoxic conditions were able to significantly decrease bacterial content, albeit with an equally detrimental effect on the microalgal population. Although the responses differed between the microalgae, anoxic incubation along with Rose Bengal at 3 μM was able to completely decontaminate N. limnetica and C. vulgaris, while D. armatus and T. obliquus could be decontaminated with an additional streak-plating step. None of the cultures could be decontaminated using antibiotics treatment. These results suggest that axenisation of microalgal cultures was largely due to anoxy, that was synergistically enhanced by Rose Bengal at a concentration of ≥3 μM.

anoxia

microalgae-bacteria

antibiotic resistant

Axenisation

Rose Bengal

Author

A. Iyer

University College Dublin

M. Monissen

RWTH Aachen University

Q. Ma

University College Dublin

M. Osborne

University College Dublin

E. Schaedig

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Oskar Modin

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Water Environment Technology

R. Halim

University College Dublin

Algal Research

2211-9264 (ISSN)

Vol. 86 103926

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Bioprocess Technology

Microbiology

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.algal.2025.103926

More information

Latest update

1/29/2025