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Systematic evaluation of Cyanidioschyzon merolae across photobioreactor systems: Linking reactor design to biomass production and biochemical composition

Preprint Created on 18 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

Extremophilic red microalgae are promising platforms for sustainable biotechnology, combining robust growth under selective thermoacidophilic conditions with production of thermostable phycobiliproteins and carbon-rich biomass. However, reactor-dependent effects on growth, product formation and biomass composition remain insufficiently resolved. Here, we systematically evaluated the extremophilic red microalga Cyanidioschyzon merolae across cultivation scales and reactor formats and benchmarked its performance against the well-established Galdieria javensis and Limnospira platensis. In small-scale multi-cultivator photobioreactors and microfluidic growth chambers, C. merolae showed superior growth, reaching a maximum growth rate of 0.034 +/- 0.001 h-1 and 8.3 +/- 0.3 g l-1 cell dry weight. Microfluidic cultivation enabled growth analysis at single-cell resolution and matched growth rates obtained in photobioreactors. To identify scalable production strategies, C. merolae was further cultivated in a flat-panel photobioreactor and a custom-designed internally illuminated photobioreactor. The custom-designed photobioreactor delivered the highest biomass concentration and productivity, yielding 11.5 +/- 0.6 g l-1 cell dry weight and 1.07 +/- 0.06 g l-1 d-1, and comparable yields with regard to R-phycocyanin and R-allophycocyanin. Biomass analysis revealed substantial carbon and nitrogen contents, starch accumulation up to > 20 % of cell dry weight, and fatty acids dominated by palmitic, linoleic and oleic acids. Despite its reduced cell wall fraction, C. merolae contained structurally diverse, cultivation-dependent polysaccharides. These results establish C. merolae as a versatile chassis for thermostable pigment production and renewable feedstock generation, highlighting photobioreactor design as a key determinant of productivity and biomass quality.

Ernst, P., Vanselow, J., Denter, M., Li, W., Witting, L., Gaetgens, J., Pauly, M., Kohlheyer, D., Urlacher, V., Feldbruegge, M., Frunzke, J.

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