Articolo in rivista, 2022, ENG, 10.3390/foods11101398

Application of Five Different Chlorella sp. Microalgal Strains for the Treatment of Vegetation Waters Derived from Unconventional Oil Extractions Enriched with Citrus Byproducts

Macaluso M.; Chiellini C.; Ciurli A.; Guglielminetti L.; Najar B.; Taglieri I.; Sanmartin C.; Bianchi A.; Venturi F.; Zinnai A.

Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment, University of Pisa, Via del Borghetto 80, Pisa, 54126, Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment, University of Pisa, Via del Borghetto 80, 54126 Pisa, Italy; Italian National Research Council, Institute of Agricultural Biology and Biotechnology, Via Moruzzi 1, Pisa, 56124; Interdepartmental Research Centre "Nutraceuticals and Food for Health", University of Pisa, Via del Borghetto 80, Pisa, 56124, Italy.

The Mediterranean diet has, among its cornerstones, the use of olive oil for its nutraceutical and organoleptic properties. Despite the numerous merits, olive-oil mill wastewater (OMWW), which is generated by the olive-oil extraction process, is one of the most serious environmental pollutants in the Mediterranean countries. The polluting potential of OMWW is due to its high content of tannins, polyphenols, polyalcohols, pectins and lipids. In order to close the recovery cycle of a fortified citrus olive oils previously developed, we tested the ability of five microalgae of the Chlorella group (SEC_LI_ChL_1, CL_Sc, CL_Ch, FB and Idr) in lowering the percentage of total phenolic compounds in vegetation water. This was obtained with three different extraction processes (conventional, and lemon and orange peels) at three concentrations each (10%, 25% and 50%). The results showed that strains Idr, FB and CL_Sc from the Lake Massaciuccoli can tolerate vegetation water from conventional and lemon peel extractions up to 25%; these strains can also reduce the phenolic compounds within the tests. The application of microalgae for OMWW treatment represents an interesting opportunity as well as an eco-friendly low-cost solution to be developed within companies as a full-scale approach, which could be applied to obtain a fortified microalgal biomass to be employed in nutraceutical fields.

Foods 11

Keywords

olive-oil mill wastewater, wastewater, Chlorella sp., microalgae, phenolic compounds

CNR authors

Chiellini Carolina

CNR institutes

IBBA – Istituto di biologia e biotecnologia agraria

ID: 467694

Year: 2022

Type: Articolo in rivista

Creation: 2022-06-01 09:09:06.000

Last update: 2022-12-06 22:12:30.000

External IDs

CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:467694

DOI: 10.3390/foods11101398

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85130583041