2017 Annual Meeting
(119g) Metabolite Cross-Feeding Drives the Symbiotic Growth of Chlorella vulgaris and Heterotrophic Microbes
Author
In this work, we show that Chlorella vulgaris UTEX #395 (a unicellular, non-motile, photosynthetic microalga) releases significant amounts of polysaccharides during photoautotrophic growth, termed âphotosynthateâ. Using C. vulgaris photosynthate, we isolated heterotrophic microorganisms from soil samples that can grow on the released sugars and used 13C-labeled photosynthate to confirm that soil microbes efficiently consumed it. In a co-culture with C. vulgaris the soil microbes significantly improved overall biomass production. Using pulse-chase tracer experiments in a co-culture of C. vulgaris and soil microbes, we demonstrated that soil microbes efficiently consumed photosynthate while C. vulgaris received carbon dioxide in return. The symbiotic exchange between the organisms where each partner benefited from the other was quantified using 13C-tracers. The increased understanding of photoautotroph-heterotroph interactions obtained in this study may help to improve the possibility of economically viable large scale biofuel production from waste carbon dioxide sources.