Glycerol production byDunaliella |
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Authors: | Ami Ben-Amotz Ilene Sussman Mordhay Avron |
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Institution: | (1) Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research, Tel Shikmona, Haifa, (Israel);(2) Biochemistry Department, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, (Israel) |
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Abstract: | Summary Species of the unicellular algaDunaliella possess outstanding tolerance of a wide range of salinities. They can adapt to grow in salt media which range from less than 0.5 M to saturated salt solutions and withstand enormous osmotic shocks through a unique osmotic adaptation. The osmoregulating mechanism depends on photosynthetic production of glycerol, whose intracellular concentration varies in direct proportion to the extracellular salt concentration and reaches values in excess of 50% of the total dry weight of the cells.Dunaliella, and another halotolerant glycerol producing alga,Asteromonas gracilis, osmoregulate biochemically by controlling glycerol biosynthesis and degradation. 3 new enzymes, NADPH-dihydroxyacetone-reductase, dihydroxyacetone kinase and glycerol-1-phosphatase seem to be involved in the osmoregulatory response via glycerol inDunaliella andAsteromonas. A hypothetical scheme of glycerol metabolism in these algae utilizing these enzymes is presented. Growth studies ofDunaliella indoors and outdoors showed that salt concentrations favoring maximal glycerol productivity are not identical with those required for maximal algal productivity. Maximal yield of glycerol occurred around 2 M NaCl while maximal algal productivity occurred below 0.5 M NaCl. Observed yields of glycerol inDunaliella culture outdoors are compared with theoretically calculated maximal yield. |
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