Maximizing microalgal lutein through light patterning and nutrient shifts in photobioreactorsopen access
- Authors
- Vadrale, Akash Pralhad; Tambat, Vaibhav Sunil; Sumathi, Yamini; Ganesh D Saratale; Singhania, Reeta Rani; Patel, Anil Kumar
- Issue Date
- Jan-2026
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons Ltd
- Keywords
- biomass; bioreactor; degradation; lutein; microalgae; two-stage cultivation
- Citation
- Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, v.106, no.6, pp 3760 - 3772
- Pages
- 13
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
- Volume
- 106
- Number
- 6
- Start Page
- 3760
- End Page
- 3772
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63563
- DOI
- 10.1002/jsfa.70466
- ISSN
- 0022-5142
1097-0010
- Abstract
- BACKGROUND: Lutein, a valuable xanthophyll from Chlorella sorokiniana, is vital for ocular and metabolic health. However, lutein degradation under high light or suboptimal nutrient hampers productivity during the growth phase. RESULTS: This study optimized lutein yield via light modulation (4k–14k lux), intermittent high-intensity (patterned) exposure, and nutrient refinement. Light–dark cycling (18:6, 8k lux) improved the lutein to 65.48 mg L−1 and increased biomass to 6.12 g L−1. A patterned 14k lux photobioreactor yielded 69.14 mg L−1 and 7.01 g L−1 biomass. Temperature modulation (35 °C) and urea as a nitrogen source under a one-stage bioprocess further increased lutein to 72.45 and 82.60 mg L−1 and biomass to 6.0–8.0 g L−1. A two-stage process combining 10k lux light and macro- and micronutrient enrichment achieved a maximum lutein yield of 86.40 mg L−1 with 8.31 g L−1 biomass. Compared with the control (62.1 mg L−1 lutein; 6.75 g L−1 biomass), the optimized two-stage strategy enhanced lutein production by ~39.1%, while biomass increased by 23.1%, indicating a proportionally higher pigment-to-biomass productivity ratio. CONCLUSION: From an economic perspective, the integrated strategy in a two-stage process can reduce costs by 28–32% of lutein, owing to improved nutrient utilization, enhanced energy efficiency in light modulation, and shorter cultivation time. The process thus demonstrates a favorable productivity-to-cost ratio, strengthening the economic feasibility of microalgal lutein production. Integrated light–nutrient strategies effectively enhance lutein production while minimizing degradation. This sustainable approach supports SDG 3 (health), SDG 9 (innovation), and SDG 13 (climate action), paving the way for a scalable microalgae lutein bioprocess. © 2026 Society of Chemical Industry. © 2026 Society of Chemical Industry.
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