Hydrocarbon biodegradation and surfactant production by acidophilic mycobacteria

Ivanova, AE; Sokolova, DSh; Kanat'eva, AYu

HERO ID

4968953

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2016

Language

English

HERO ID 4968953
In Press No
Year 2016
Title Hydrocarbon biodegradation and surfactant production by acidophilic mycobacteria
Authors Ivanova, AE; Sokolova, DSh; Kanat'eva, AYu
Journal Microbiology
Volume 85
Issue 3
Page Numbers 317-324
Abstract Production of biosurfactants by acidophilic mycobacteria was demonstrated in the course of aerobic degradation of hydrocarbons (n-tridecane, n-tricosane, n-hexacosane, model mixtures of D-14-D-17, D(12)aEuro'D-19, and D-9-D-21 n-alkanes, 2,2,4,4,6,8,8-heptamethylnonane, squalane, and butylcyclohexane) and their complex mixtures (hydrocarbon gas condensate, kerosene, black oil, and paraffin oil) under extremely acidic conditions (pH 2.5). When grown on hydrocarbons, the studied bacterial culture AG(S10) caused a decrease in the surface and interfacial tension of the solutions (to the lowest observed values of 26.0 and 1.3 mN/m, respectively) compared to the bacteria-free control. The rheological characteristics of the culture changed only when mycobacteria were grown on hydrocarbons. Neither the medium nor the cell-free culture liquid had the surfactant activity, which indicated formation of an endotype biosurfactant by mycobacteria. Biodegradation of n-alkanes was accompanied by an increase in cell numbers, surfactant production, and changes in the hydrophobicity of bacterial cell surface and in associated phenomena of adsorption and desorption to the hydrocarbon phase. Research on AGS10 culture liquids containing the raw biosurfactant demonstrated the preservation of its activity within a broad range of pH, temperature, and salinity.
Doi 10.1134/S002626171603005X
Wosid WOS:000378773600008
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword acidophilic mycobacteria; acidic environment; hydrocarbon biodegradation; biosurfactants; surface and interfacial tension; adhesion; cell surface hydrophobicity
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