Total Fatty Acid Content Determination of Whole Microalgal Biomass Using In Situ Transesterification

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Abstract

The aliphatic chains of fatty acids are the most prominent and potentially the highest value precursor constituents of algal biomass, and thus accurately quantifying the algal biomass total fatty acid content is a prerequisite for comparing algal strains, growth conditions, and processes. Direct, acid-catalyzed transesterification of whole microalgal biomass is a simple, effective, and widely used method to determine the fatty acid content in whole algal biomass. Such a direct transesterification procedure typically covers the following steps: first, solubilizing the lipids in the biomass matrix and then liberating the fatty acids to make these available for catalytic upgrading to fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs), subsequent extraction into hexane, and then quantification by gas chromatography. The method we describe here requires less than 10 mg of biomass per sample and is considered high-throughput and highly accurate.

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Van Wychen, S., & Laurens, L. M. L. (2020). Total Fatty Acid Content Determination of Whole Microalgal Biomass Using In Situ Transesterification. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1980, pp. 203–214). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/7651_2017_107

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