With the increasing world demand for biofuel, a  number of oleaginous algal species are being considered as  renewable sources of oil. Chlorella protothecoides Kr�ger  synthesizes triacylglycerols (TAGs) as storage compounds  that can be converted into renewable fuel utilizing an anabolic  pathway that is poorly understood. The paucity of algal chloroplast  genome sequences has been an important constraint to  chloroplast transformation and for studying gene expression  in TAGs pathways. In this study, the intact chloroplasts were  released from algal cells using sonication followed by sucrose  gradient centrifugation, resulting in a 2.36-fold enrichment of  chloroplasts from C. protothecoides, based on qPCR analysis.  The C. protothecoides chloroplast genome (cpDNA) was  determined using the Illumina HiSeq 2000 sequencing platform  and found to be 84,576 Kb in size (8.57 Kb) in size, with  a GC content of 30.8 %. This is the first report of an optimized  protocol that uses a sonication step, followed by sucrose  gradient centrifugation, to release and enrich intact chloroplasts  from a microalga (C. prototheocoides) of sufficient  quality to permit chloroplast genome sequencing with high  coverage, while minimizing nuclear genome contamination.  The approach is expected to guide chloroplast isolation from  other oleaginous algal species for a variety of uses that benefit  from enrichment of chloroplasts, ranging from biochemical  analysis to genomics studies.