加载中...

点击这里给我发消息

QQ群:417857029

新产品·新技术信息

Researchers use microalgae to turn CO₂ and sunlight into glycolate

来源:specialchem2025年11月06日

阅读次数:

Researchers in Saxony are developing biotechnological cell factories that do not require agricultural land or fossil raw materials. Chemnitz University of Technology, Leipzig University, and Fraunhofer FEP are using microalgae to produce the important basic chemical glycolate from carbon dioxide and sunlight - a building block for medicines, preservatives, and polymers that are currently produced from partially toxic fossil raw materials.
 
The PhotoKon project: Sustainable bioeconomy
The interdisciplinary cooperation project PhotoKon could make a significant contribution to the regional bioeconomy by producing valuable chemicals directly from CO2 and light, bypassing the need for scarce agricultural land or fossil resources. The researchers utilize the microalgae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which they are optimizing for industrial use with novel mutation methods and AI-based screening.
 
 
 
The three project partners have already made significant progress and are working with innovative approaches. PhotoKon is developing the scientific basis for the use of ionizing radiation as a new method for the targeted cultivation and optimization of photosynthetically active cells.
 
 
 
Fraunhofer FEP in Dresden has developed a novel mutation method based on low-energy electron radiation (< 300 keV). Professor Simone Schopf from Fraunhofer FEP said, “Accompanying dosimetry experiments with commercial film dosimeters and in-house dose measurement methods enable us to precisely control the mutagenic effect.”
 
 
 
Leipzig University has already demonstrated the basic feasibility of photocatalytic glycolate production and is developing an innovative pH-based screening method. This method uses color indicators on agar plates, which change as a result of glycolate excretion by the algae cells. This approach is based on the experimental observation that the accumulation of glycolate in the surrounding medium correlates with a decrease in pH.
 
AI-based technology and intelligent process control
Chemnitz University of Technology has made significant progress in robotics-assisted mutant screening using AI-based image analysis. The team is developing automated screening routines that can independently analyze thousands of algae colonies and identify promising mutants.
 
 
 
Professor Severin Sasso from Leipzig University said, “This interdisciplinary approach enables us to specifically utilize the natural photorespiration of algae - normally an unwanted side effect - for targeted glycolate production.”
 
 
 
Screening and isolation of positive mutants are performed using an AI-based image recognition process with transfer learning approaches. By isolating promising cell factories, it is possible to investigate the biological basis of the effect of ionizing radiation on cells and to implement scaling in technical bioprocesses.
 
 
 
“We aim for a biologically and technologically improved process, which will be validated on a laboratory scale at the new Controlled Environment Agriculture Lab at Chemnitz University of Technology,” said Dr. Felix Krujatz.
 
 
 
Through intelligent control technology for the efficient production of glycolate on a laboratory scale, PhotoKon technology opens the door to sustainable, bio-based conversion of CO2 into the base chemical.
  • 标签:
相关阅读

本站所有信息与内容,版权归原作者所有。网站中部分新闻、文章来源于网络或会员供稿,如读者对作品版权有疑议,请及时与我们联系,电话:025-85303363 QQ:2402955403。文章仅代表作者本人的观点,与本网站立场无关。转载本站的内容,请务必注明"来源:林中祥胶粘剂技术信息网(www.adhesive-lin.com)".

网友评论

©2015 南京爱德福信息科技有限公司   苏ICP备10201337 | 技术支持:建站100

客服

客服
电话

1

手机:18114925746

客服
邮箱

565052751@qq.com

若您需要帮助,您也可以留下联系方式

发送邮箱

扫二
维码

微信二维码