Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lieve M.L. Laurens is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lieve M.L. Laurens.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2010

Increased Lipid Accumulation in the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii sta7-10 Starchless Isoamylase Mutant and Increased Carbohydrate Synthesis in Complemented Strains

Victoria H. Work; Randor Radakovits; Robert E. Jinkerson; Jonathan E. Meuser; Lee G. Elliott; David J. Vinyard; Lieve M.L. Laurens; G. Charles Dismukes; Matthew C. Posewitz

ABSTRACT The accumulation of bioenergy carriers was assessed in two starchless mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (the sta6 [ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase] and sta7-10 [isoamylase] mutants), a control strain (CC124), and two complemented strains of the sta7-10 mutant. The results indicate that the genetic blockage of starch synthesis in the sta6 and sta7-10 mutants increases the accumulation of lipids on a cellular basis during nitrogen deprivation relative to that in the CC124 control as determined by conversion to fatty acid methyl esters. However, this increased level of lipid accumulation is energetically insufficient to completely offset the loss of cellular starch that is synthesized by CC124 during nitrogen deprivation. We therefore investigated acetate utilization and O2 evolution to obtain further insights into the physiological adjustments utilized by the two starchless mutants in the absence of starch synthesis. The results demonstrate that both starchless mutants metabolize less acetate and have more severely attenuated levels of photosynthetic O2 evolution than CC124, indicating that a decrease in overall anabolic processes is a significant physiological response in the starchless mutants during nitrogen deprivation. Interestingly, two independent sta7-10:STA7 complemented strains exhibited significantly greater quantities of cellular starch and lipid than CC124 during acclimation to nitrogen deprivation. Moreover, the complemented strains synthesized significant quantities of starch even when cultured in nutrient-replete medium.


Biotechnology Advances | 2014

Bioconversion of natural gas to liquid fuel: Opportunities and challenges

Qiang Fei; Michael Guarnieri; Ling Tao; Lieve M.L. Laurens; Nancy Dowe; Philip T. Pienkos

Natural gas is a mixture of low molecular weight hydrocarbon gases that can be generated from either fossil or anthropogenic resources. Although natural gas is used as a transportation fuel, constraints in storage, relatively low energy content (MJ/L), and delivery have limited widespread adoption. Advanced utilization of natural gas has been explored for biofuel production by microorganisms. In recent years, the aerobic bioconversion of natural gas (or primarily the methane content of natural gas) into liquid fuels (Bio-GTL) by biocatalysts (methanotrophs) has gained increasing attention as a promising alternative for drop-in biofuel production. Methanotrophic bacteria are capable of converting methane into microbial lipids, which can in turn be converted into renewable diesel via a hydrotreating process. In this paper, biodiversity, catalytic properties and key enzymes and pathways of these microbes are summarized. Bioprocess technologies are discussed based upon existing literature, including cultivation conditions, fermentation modes, bioreactor design, and lipid extraction and upgrading. This review also outlines the potential of Bio-GTL using methane as an alternative carbon source as well as the major challenges and future research needs of microbial lipid accumulation derived from methane, key performance index, and techno-economic analysis. An analysis of raw material costs suggests that methane-derived diesel fuel has the potential to be competitive with petroleum-derived diesel.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Algal Biomass Constituent Analysis: Method Uncertainties and Investigation of the Underlying Measuring Chemistries

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Thomas A. Dempster; Howland D. T. Jones; Edward J. Wolfrum; Stefanie Van Wychen; Jordan S. P. McAllister; Michelle Rencenberger; Kylea Joy Parchert; Lindsey Marie Gloe

Algal biomass compositional analysis data form the basis of a large number of techno-economic process analysis models that are used to investigate and compare different processes in algal biofuels production. However, the analytical methods used to generate these data are far from standardized. This work investigated the applicability of common methods for rapid chemical analysis of biomass samples with respect to accuracy and precision. This study measured lipids, protein, carbohydrates, ash, and moisture of a single algal biomass sample at 3 institutions by 8 independent researchers over 12 separate workdays. Results show statistically significant differences in the results from a given analytical method among laboratories but not between analysts at individual laboratories, suggesting consistent training is a critical issue for empirical analytical methods. Significantly different results from multiple lipid and protein measurements were found to be due to different measurement chemistries. We identified a set of compositional analysis procedures that are in best agreement with data obtained by more advanced analytical procedures. The methods described here and used for the round robin experiment do not require specialized instrumentation, and with detailed analytical documentation, the differences between laboratories can be markedly reduced.


Bioenergy Research | 2011

Feasibility of spectroscopic characterization of algal lipids: chemometric correlation of NIR and FTIR spectra with exogenous lipids in algal biomass.

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Edward J. Wolfrum

A large number of algal biofuels projects rely on a lipid screening technique for selecting a particular algal strain with which to work. We have developed a multivariate calibration model for predicting the levels of spiked neutral and polar lipids in microalgae, based on infrared (both near-infrared (NIR) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR)) spectroscopy. The advantage of an infrared spectroscopic technique over traditional chemical methods is the direct, fast, and non-destructive nature of the screening method. This calibration model provides a fast and high-throughput method for determining lipid content, providing an alternative to laborious traditional wet chemical methods. We present data of a study based on nine levels of exogenous lipid spikes (between 1% and 3% (w/w)) of trilaurin as a triglyceride and phosphatidylcholine as a phospholipid model compound in lyophilized algal biomass. We used a chemometric approach to corrrelate the main spectral changes upon increasing phospholipid and triglyceride content in algal biomass collected from single species. A multivariate partial least squares (PLS) calibration model was built and improved upon with the addition of multiple species to the dataset. Our results show that NIR and FTIR spectra of biomass from four species can be used to accurately predict the levels of exogenously added lipids. It appears that the cross-species verification of the predictions is more accurate with the NIR models (R2 = 0.969 and 0.951 and RMECV = 0.182 and 0.227% for trilaurin and phosphatidylcholine spike respectively), compared with FTIR (R2 = 0.907 and 0.464 and RMECV = 0.302 and 0.767% for trilaurin and phosphatidylcholine spike, respectively). A fast high-throughput spectroscopic lipid fingerprinting method can be applied in a multitude of screening efforts that are ongoing in the microalgal research community.


Green Chemistry | 2015

Acid-catalyzed algal biomass pretreatment for integrated lipid and carbohydrate-based biofuels production

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Nick Nagle; Ryan Davis; N. Sweeney; S. Van Wychen; A. Lowell; Philip T. Pienkos

One of the major challenges associated with algal biofuels production in a biorefinery-type setting is improving biomass utilization in its entirety, increasing the process energetic yields and providing economically viable and scalable co-product concepts. We demonstrate the effectiveness of a novel, integrated technology based on moderate temperatures and low pH to convert the carbohydrates in wet algal biomass to soluble sugars for fermentation, while making lipids more accessible for downstream extraction and leaving a protein-enriched fraction behind. We studied the effect of harvest timing on the conversion yields, using two algal strains; Chlorella and Scenedesmus, generating biomass with distinctive compositional ratios of protein, carbohydrate, and lipids. We found that the late harvest Scenedesmus biomass had the maximum theoretical biofuel potential at 143 gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE) combined fuel yield per dry ton biomass, followed by late harvest Chlorella at 128 GGE per ton. Our experimental data show a clear difference between the two strains, as Scenedesmus was more successfully converted in this process with a demonstrated 97 GGE per ton. Our measurements indicated a release of >90% of the available glucose in the hydrolysate liquors and an extraction and recovery of up to 97% of the fatty acids from wet biomass. Techno-economic analysis for the combined product yields indicates that this process exhibits the potential to improve per-gallon fuel costs by up to 33% compared to a lipids-only process for one strain, Scenedesmus, grown to the mid-point harvest condition.


Bioresource Technology | 2014

Efficient anaerobic digestion of whole microalgae and lipid-extracted microalgae residues for methane energy production

Baisuo Zhao; Jingwei Ma; Quanbao Zhao; Lieve M.L. Laurens; Eric E. Jarvis; Shulin Chen; Craig Frear

The primary aim of this study was to completely investigate extensive biological methane potential (BMP) on both whole microalgae and its lipid-extracted biomass residues with various degrees of biomass pretreatment. Specific methane productivities (SMP) under batch conditions for non-lipid extracted biomass were better than lipid-extracted biomass residues and exhibited no signs of ammonia or carbon/nitrogen (C/N) ratio inhibition when digested at high I/S ratio (I/S ratio⩾1.0). SMP for suitably extracted biomass ranged from 0.30 to 0.38LCH4/gVS (volatile solids). For both whole and lipid-extracted biomass, overall organic conversion ranged from 59.33 to 78.50 as a measure of %VS reduction with greater percentage biodegradability in general found within the lipid-extracted biomass. Higher production levels correlated to lipid content with a linear relationship between SMP and ash-free lipid content being developed at a R(2) of 0.814.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2012

Separation and quantification of microalgal carbohydrates

David W. Templeton; Matthew Quinn; Stefanie Van Wychen; Deborah Hyman; Lieve M.L. Laurens

Structural carbohydrates can constitute a large fraction of the dry weight of algal biomass and thus accurate identification and quantification is important for summative mass closure. Two limitations to the accurate characterization of microalgal carbohydrates are the lack of a robust analytical procedure to hydrolyze polymeric carbohydrates to their respective monomers and the subsequent identification and quantification of those monosaccharides. We address the second limitation, chromatographic separation of monosaccharides, here by identifying optimum conditions for the resolution of a synthetic mixture of 13 microalgae-specific monosaccharides, comprised of 8 neutral, 2 amino sugars, 2 uronic acids and 1 alditol (myo-inositol as an internal standard). The synthetic 13-carbohydrate mix showed incomplete resolution across 11 traditional high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) methods, but showed improved resolution and accurate quantification using anion exchange chromatography (HPAEC) as well as alditol acetate derivatization followed by gas chromatography (for the neutral- and amino-sugars only). We demonstrate the application of monosaccharide quantification using optimized chromatography conditions after sulfuric acid analytical hydrolysis for three model algae strains and compare the quantification and complexity of monosaccharides in analytical hydrolysates relative to a typical terrestrial feedstock, sugarcane bagasse.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2015

Bioreactor performance parameters for an industrially-promising methanotroph Methylomicrobium buryatense 5GB1

Alexey Gilman; Lieve M.L. Laurens; Aaron W. Puri; Frances Chu; Philip T. Pienkos; Mary E. Lidstrom

BackgroundMethane is a feedstock of interest for the future, both from natural gas and from renewable biogas sources. Methanotrophic bacteria have the potential to enable commercial methane bioconversion to value-added products such as fuels and chemicals. A strain of interest for such applications is Methylomicrobium buryatense 5GB1, due to its robust growth characteristics. However, to take advantage of the potential of this methanotroph, it is important to generate comprehensive bioreactor-based datasets for different growth conditions to compare bioprocess parameters.ResultsDatasets of growth parameters, gas utilization rates, and products (total biomass, extracted fatty acids, glycogen, excreted acids) were obtained for cultures of M. buryatense 5GB1 grown in continuous culture under methane limitation and O2 limitation conditions. Additionally, experiments were performed involving unrestricted batch growth conditions with both methane and methanol as substrate. All four growth conditions show significant differences. The most notable changes are the high glycogen content and high formate excretion for cells grown on methanol (batch), and high O2:CH4 utilization ratio for cells grown under methane limitation.ConclusionsThe results presented here represent the most comprehensive published bioreactor datasets for a gamma-proteobacterial methanotroph. This information shows that metabolism by M. buryatense 5GB1 differs significantly for each of the four conditions tested. O2 limitation resulted in the lowest relative O2 demand and fed-batch growth on methane the highest. Future studies are needed to understand the metabolic basis of these differences. However, these results suggest that both batch and continuous culture conditions have specific advantages, depending on the product of interest.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2014

Strain, biochemistry, and cultivation-dependent measurement variability of algal biomass composition.

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Stefanie Van Wychen; Jordan S. P. McAllister; Sarah Arrowsmith; Thomas A. Dempster; John A. McGowen; Philip T. Pienkos

Accurate compositional analysis in biofuel feedstocks is imperative; the yields of individual components can define the economics of an entire process. In the nascent industry of algal biofuels and bioproducts, analytical methods that have been deemed acceptable for decades are suddenly critical for commercialization. We tackled the question of how the strain and biochemical makeup of algal cells affect chemical measurements. We selected a set of six procedures (two each for lipids, protein, and carbohydrates): three rapid fingerprinting methods and three advanced chromatography-based methods. All methods were used to measure the composition of 100 samples from three strains: Scenedesmus sp., Chlorella sp., and Nannochloropsis sp. The data presented point not only to species-specific discrepancies but also to cell biochemistry-related discrepancies. There are cases where two respective methods agree but the differences are often significant with over- or underestimation of up to 90%, likely due to chemical interferences with the rapid spectrophotometric measurements. We provide background on the chemistry of interfering reactions for the fingerprinting methods and conclude that for accurate compositional analysis of algae and process and mass balance closure, emphasis should be placed on unambiguous characterization using methods where individual components are measured independently.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Development of algae biorefinery concepts for biofuels and bioproducts; a perspective on process-compatible products and their impact on cost-reduction

Lieve M.L. Laurens; Jennifer Markham; David W. Templeton; Earl Christensen; Stefanie Van Wychen; Eric W. Vadelius; Melodie Chen-Glasser; Tao Dong; Ryan Davis; Philip T. Pienkos

Identifying and addressing critical improvements in biomass, bioproduct and biofuel productivity is a priority for the nascent algae-based bioeconomy. Economic and sustainability principles should guide these developing improvements and help to unravel the contentious water–food–energy–environment nexus that algae inhabit. Understanding the biochemistry of the storage carbon metabolism of algae to produce biofuels and bioproducts can bring to light the key barriers that currently limit the overall carbon efficiency and the photosynthetic efficiency, and ultimately guide productivity and commercial viability in the context of limiting resources. In the analysis reported here, we present different potential pathways for a conceptual algae biorefinery framework, with each pathway addressing one of the main identified barriers to future deployment. We highlight the molecular identification, in the form of an extensive literature review, of potential bioproducts that may be derived directly from both biomass and fractions produced through a conversion pathway, for three important commercially-relevant genera of algae, Scenedesmus, Chlorella and Nannochloropsis. We establish a relationship between each of the potential bioproducts, describe relevant conversion and extraction processes, and discuss market opportunities with values and sizes as they relate to commercial development of the products.

Collaboration


Dive into the Lieve M.L. Laurens's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philip T. Pienkos

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stefanie Van Wychen

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric P. Knoshaug

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Dong

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David W. Templeton

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edward J. Wolfrum

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nick Nagle

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dries Vandamme

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Imogen Foubert

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge