{"title":"评价毛细光生物膜反应器高密度培养混合奖杯人工微生物群落的结垢性","authors":"Amelie Kenkel, Rohan Karande, Katja Bühler","doi":"10.1002/elsc.202300014","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Capillary biofilm reactors (CBRs) are attractive for growing photoautotrophic bacteria as they allow high cell-density cultivation. Here, we evaluated the CBR system's suitability to grow an artificial consortium composed of <i>Synechocystis</i> sp. PCC 6803 and <i>Pseudomonas</i> sp. VBL120. The impact of reactor material, flow rate, pH, O<sub>2</sub>, and medium composition on biomass development and long-term biofilm stability at different reactor scales was studied. Silicone was superior over other materials like glass or PVC due to its excellent O<sub>2</sub> permeability. High flow rates of 520 μL min<sup>−1</sup> prevented biofilm sloughing in 1 m capillary reactors, leading to a 54% higher biomass dry weight combined with the lowest O<sub>2</sub> concentration inside the reactor compared to standard operating conditions. Further increase in reactor length to 5 m revealed a limitation in trace elements. Increasing trace elements by a factor of five allowed for complete surface coverage with a biomass dry weight of 36.8 g m<sup>−2</sup> and, thus, a successful CBR scale-up by a factor of 25.</p><p><b>Practical application</b>: Cyanobacteria use light energy to upgrade CO<sub>2</sub>, thereby holding the potential for carbon-neutral production processes. One of the persisting challenges is low cell density due to light limitations and O<sub>2</sub> accumulation often occurring in established flat panel or tubular photobioreactors. Compared to planktonic cultures, much higher cell densities (factor 10 to 100) can be obtained in cyanobacterial biofilms. The capillary biofilm reactor (CBR) offers good growth conditions for cyanobacterial biofilms, but its applicability has been shown only on the laboratory scale. Here, a first scale-up study based on sizing up was performed, testing the feasibility of this system for large-scale applications. We demonstrate that by optimizing nutrient supply and flow conditions, the system could be enlarged by factor 25 by enhancing the length of the reactor. This reactor concept, combined with cyanobacterial biofilms and numbering up, holds the potential to be applied as a flexible, carbon-neutral production platform for value-added compounds.</p>","PeriodicalId":11678,"journal":{"name":"Engineering in Life Sciences","volume":"23 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/elsc.202300014","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Evaluating scaling of capillary photo-biofilm reactors for high cell density cultivation of mixed trophies artificial microbial consortia\",\"authors\":\"Amelie Kenkel, Rohan Karande, Katja Bühler\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/elsc.202300014\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Capillary biofilm reactors (CBRs) are attractive for growing photoautotrophic bacteria as they allow high cell-density cultivation. Here, we evaluated the CBR system's suitability to grow an artificial consortium composed of <i>Synechocystis</i> sp. PCC 6803 and <i>Pseudomonas</i> sp. VBL120. The impact of reactor material, flow rate, pH, O<sub>2</sub>, and medium composition on biomass development and long-term biofilm stability at different reactor scales was studied. Silicone was superior over other materials like glass or PVC due to its excellent O<sub>2</sub> permeability. High flow rates of 520 μL min<sup>−1</sup> prevented biofilm sloughing in 1 m capillary reactors, leading to a 54% higher biomass dry weight combined with the lowest O<sub>2</sub> concentration inside the reactor compared to standard operating conditions. Further increase in reactor length to 5 m revealed a limitation in trace elements. Increasing trace elements by a factor of five allowed for complete surface coverage with a biomass dry weight of 36.8 g m<sup>−2</sup> and, thus, a successful CBR scale-up by a factor of 25.</p><p><b>Practical application</b>: Cyanobacteria use light energy to upgrade CO<sub>2</sub>, thereby holding the potential for carbon-neutral production processes. One of the persisting challenges is low cell density due to light limitations and O<sub>2</sub> accumulation often occurring in established flat panel or tubular photobioreactors. Compared to planktonic cultures, much higher cell densities (factor 10 to 100) can be obtained in cyanobacterial biofilms. The capillary biofilm reactor (CBR) offers good growth conditions for cyanobacterial biofilms, but its applicability has been shown only on the laboratory scale. Here, a first scale-up study based on sizing up was performed, testing the feasibility of this system for large-scale applications. We demonstrate that by optimizing nutrient supply and flow conditions, the system could be enlarged by factor 25 by enhancing the length of the reactor. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
毛细管生物膜反应器(CBRs)对生长光自养细菌具有吸引力,因为它们允许高细胞密度培养。在这里,我们评估了CBR系统生长由聚囊藻属PCC 6803和假单胞菌属VBL120组成的人工群落的适宜性。研究了不同反应器规模下反应器材料、流速、pH、O2和介质组成对生物量发展和生物膜长期稳定性的影响。硅树脂由于其优异的O2渗透性而优于玻璃或PVC等其他材料。520μL min−1的高流速防止了1 m毛细管反应器中的生物膜脱落,与标准操作条件相比,生物量干重增加了54%,反应器内的O2浓度最低。反应器长度进一步增加到5米表明微量元素的限制。将微量元素增加5倍,可以实现完全的表面覆盖,生物质干重为36.8 g m−2,因此,成功地将CBR放大25倍。实际应用:蓝细菌利用光能升级CO2,从而保持碳中和的生产工艺的潜力。持续存在的挑战之一是由于光限制和O2积累导致的低细胞密度,O2积累通常发生在已建立的平板或管状光生物反应器中。与浮游培养物相比,蓝藻生物膜中可以获得更高的细胞密度(因子10-100)。毛细管生物膜反应器(CBR)为蓝藻生物膜提供了良好的生长条件,但其适用性仅在实验室规模上得到证明。在这里,进行了第一次基于规模的放大研究,测试了该系统在大规模应用中的可行性。我们证明,通过优化营养物供应和流动条件,可以通过增加反应器的长度将系统扩大25倍。这种反应器的概念,与蓝藻生物膜和编号相结合,具有作为一种灵活的碳中和的增值化合物生产平台的潜力。
Evaluating scaling of capillary photo-biofilm reactors for high cell density cultivation of mixed trophies artificial microbial consortia
Capillary biofilm reactors (CBRs) are attractive for growing photoautotrophic bacteria as they allow high cell-density cultivation. Here, we evaluated the CBR system's suitability to grow an artificial consortium composed of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Pseudomonas sp. VBL120. The impact of reactor material, flow rate, pH, O2, and medium composition on biomass development and long-term biofilm stability at different reactor scales was studied. Silicone was superior over other materials like glass or PVC due to its excellent O2 permeability. High flow rates of 520 μL min−1 prevented biofilm sloughing in 1 m capillary reactors, leading to a 54% higher biomass dry weight combined with the lowest O2 concentration inside the reactor compared to standard operating conditions. Further increase in reactor length to 5 m revealed a limitation in trace elements. Increasing trace elements by a factor of five allowed for complete surface coverage with a biomass dry weight of 36.8 g m−2 and, thus, a successful CBR scale-up by a factor of 25.
Practical application: Cyanobacteria use light energy to upgrade CO2, thereby holding the potential for carbon-neutral production processes. One of the persisting challenges is low cell density due to light limitations and O2 accumulation often occurring in established flat panel or tubular photobioreactors. Compared to planktonic cultures, much higher cell densities (factor 10 to 100) can be obtained in cyanobacterial biofilms. The capillary biofilm reactor (CBR) offers good growth conditions for cyanobacterial biofilms, but its applicability has been shown only on the laboratory scale. Here, a first scale-up study based on sizing up was performed, testing the feasibility of this system for large-scale applications. We demonstrate that by optimizing nutrient supply and flow conditions, the system could be enlarged by factor 25 by enhancing the length of the reactor. This reactor concept, combined with cyanobacterial biofilms and numbering up, holds the potential to be applied as a flexible, carbon-neutral production platform for value-added compounds.
期刊介绍:
Engineering in Life Sciences (ELS) focuses on engineering principles and innovations in life sciences and biotechnology. Life sciences and biotechnology covered in ELS encompass the use of biomolecules (e.g. proteins/enzymes), cells (microbial, plant and mammalian origins) and biomaterials for biosynthesis, biotransformation, cell-based treatment and bio-based solutions in industrial and pharmaceutical biotechnologies as well as in biomedicine. ELS especially aims to promote interdisciplinary collaborations among biologists, biotechnologists and engineers for quantitative understanding and holistic engineering (design-built-test) of biological parts and processes in the different application areas.