Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation

Food security, increase in global population, ecological impacts of climate change, and greater health awareness have led to the recent rise in alternative protein products. One such product is microalgae. However, its production is not yet viable because of the high cost, technological immaturit...

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Main Author: Lee, Daryl
Other Authors: Raymond Lau Wai Man
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152626
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1526262021-10-05T07:44:18Z Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation Lee, Daryl Raymond Lau Wai Man School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering WMLau@ntu.edu.sg Science::Biological sciences Food security, increase in global population, ecological impacts of climate change, and greater health awareness have led to the recent rise in alternative protein products. One such product is microalgae. However, its production is not yet viable because of the high cost, technological immaturity, and lack of understanding. A simpler and more direct way to improve the economics is to increase the biomass productivity or output of the process. Hence, the first objective of this thesis is to investigate the use of herbs and spices to determine if its use could improve the growth of microalgae. Different herbs and spices were screened (and different concentrations and forms). It was found that onion extract was the most effective and managed to double the growth rate and increase the cell density to about 6 times that of control. The second objective is to determine the protein digestibility of microalgae, specifically the PDCAAS method to determine the protein quality of microalgae. This is important if the microalgae (whether whole or extracted proteins) is to be used as food to supply humans with essential amino acids (and nutrients). The PDCAAS value was found to be relatively high, 0.88, comparable to beef and soy. The digestibility was found to have a maximum value of 1 but dropped to 0.88 due to the lack a certain amino acid (methionine). It is said that the biorefinery approach is the way to go for a microalgae production process that is viable and economical. High value products are produced and sold alongside cheaper and lower value commodity products. However, the technologies available for microalgae are still at an infancy and a lack of understanding of the processes is hindering its further development. The third objective of this thesis is thus to develop a method to estimate the biochemical composition of the biomass that avoids the laborious and time-consuming disruption/extraction/measurement processes. Data available from literature were used to evaluate the performance of the prediction model and it was found to be highly predictive with low root mean squared errors. Doctor of Philosophy 2021-09-06T02:20:07Z 2021-09-06T02:20:07Z 2021 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Lee, D. (2021). Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152626 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152626 10.32657/10356/152626 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Lee, Daryl
Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
description Food security, increase in global population, ecological impacts of climate change, and greater health awareness have led to the recent rise in alternative protein products. One such product is microalgae. However, its production is not yet viable because of the high cost, technological immaturity, and lack of understanding. A simpler and more direct way to improve the economics is to increase the biomass productivity or output of the process. Hence, the first objective of this thesis is to investigate the use of herbs and spices to determine if its use could improve the growth of microalgae. Different herbs and spices were screened (and different concentrations and forms). It was found that onion extract was the most effective and managed to double the growth rate and increase the cell density to about 6 times that of control. The second objective is to determine the protein digestibility of microalgae, specifically the PDCAAS method to determine the protein quality of microalgae. This is important if the microalgae (whether whole or extracted proteins) is to be used as food to supply humans with essential amino acids (and nutrients). The PDCAAS value was found to be relatively high, 0.88, comparable to beef and soy. The digestibility was found to have a maximum value of 1 but dropped to 0.88 due to the lack a certain amino acid (methionine). It is said that the biorefinery approach is the way to go for a microalgae production process that is viable and economical. High value products are produced and sold alongside cheaper and lower value commodity products. However, the technologies available for microalgae are still at an infancy and a lack of understanding of the processes is hindering its further development. The third objective of this thesis is thus to develop a method to estimate the biochemical composition of the biomass that avoids the laborious and time-consuming disruption/extraction/measurement processes. Data available from literature were used to evaluate the performance of the prediction model and it was found to be highly predictive with low root mean squared errors.
author2 Raymond Lau Wai Man
author_facet Raymond Lau Wai Man
Lee, Daryl
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Lee, Daryl
author_sort Lee, Daryl
title Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
title_short Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
title_full Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
title_fullStr Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
title_full_unstemmed Towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
title_sort towards the use of microalgae as a source of alternative protein : using plant extract as a growth enhancer, protein quality quantification, and a method of biochemical content estimation
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152626
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