TY - JOUR
T1 - Harnessing pH and light cycles to boost microbial protein production in mixed culture purple non-sulfur bacteria wastewater bioremediation
AU - Wada, Ojima Zechariah
AU - Vincent, Annette Shoba
AU - Mckay, Gordon
AU - Mackey, Hamish Robert
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - The application of purple non-sulfur bacteria (PNSB) in wastewater bioremediation has shown promise, but most studies have focused on agricultural and municipal wastewaters, often employing axenic cultures under controlled conditions. This study explores the use of PNSB-enriched mixed cultures treating high-strength Fischer-Tropsch process water (COD = 5-10 g/L; COD:N up to 59:1) for recovery of microbial protein under microaerobic-natural diurnal light cycles and varying pH conditions over 72 h batch/fed-batch trials. High biomass concentrations (1.1 to 1.4 g(VSS)/L), pollutant removal (771-1526 mg-(COD)center dot L-1 center dot d(-1) and 16-56 mg-(NH4)center dot L-1 center dot d(-1)) and Rhodopseudomonas sp. selectivity (up to 52 %) were achieved, even at high pH and illumination cycling. Acetate was also identified to be the most preferential VFA, followed by propionate. The recovered biomass mostly consisted of protein and was highest in transient conditions like fluctuating pH (56 %) and 12-h light cycling (48 %), compared to baseline conditions (41 %). Lipids comprised 23 % to 37 % of the biomass, mostly consisting of C16-C18 unsaturated fatty acids. Other valuable bioproducts present were carbohydrates (10 % to 13 %) and pigments (<2.5 %). Enrichment of PNSB in the mixed culture directly correlated with pollutant removal rates, biomass accumulation, and pigment content. The results demonstrate that while continuous lighting and pH regulation are preferential, PNSB-rich single-cell protein can be produced through the efficient conversion of high-strength wastewater under natural diurnal light cycles and unregulated pH conditions. Lipids present in the biomass relevant for biodiesel production also provide alternative valorisation pathways.
AB - The application of purple non-sulfur bacteria (PNSB) in wastewater bioremediation has shown promise, but most studies have focused on agricultural and municipal wastewaters, often employing axenic cultures under controlled conditions. This study explores the use of PNSB-enriched mixed cultures treating high-strength Fischer-Tropsch process water (COD = 5-10 g/L; COD:N up to 59:1) for recovery of microbial protein under microaerobic-natural diurnal light cycles and varying pH conditions over 72 h batch/fed-batch trials. High biomass concentrations (1.1 to 1.4 g(VSS)/L), pollutant removal (771-1526 mg-(COD)center dot L-1 center dot d(-1) and 16-56 mg-(NH4)center dot L-1 center dot d(-1)) and Rhodopseudomonas sp. selectivity (up to 52 %) were achieved, even at high pH and illumination cycling. Acetate was also identified to be the most preferential VFA, followed by propionate. The recovered biomass mostly consisted of protein and was highest in transient conditions like fluctuating pH (56 %) and 12-h light cycling (48 %), compared to baseline conditions (41 %). Lipids comprised 23 % to 37 % of the biomass, mostly consisting of C16-C18 unsaturated fatty acids. Other valuable bioproducts present were carbohydrates (10 % to 13 %) and pigments (<2.5 %). Enrichment of PNSB in the mixed culture directly correlated with pollutant removal rates, biomass accumulation, and pigment content. The results demonstrate that while continuous lighting and pH regulation are preferential, PNSB-rich single-cell protein can be produced through the efficient conversion of high-strength wastewater under natural diurnal light cycles and unregulated pH conditions. Lipids present in the biomass relevant for biodiesel production also provide alternative valorisation pathways.
KW - Biofuel
KW - Biorefinery
KW - Circular economy
KW - Fuel synthesis process water
KW - Single cell protein
KW - Wastewater resource recovery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212197417&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jwpe.2024.106785
DO - 10.1016/j.jwpe.2024.106785
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212197417
SN - 2214-7144
VL - 69
JO - Journal of Water Process Engineering
JF - Journal of Water Process Engineering
M1 - 106785
ER -