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Nitrogen dependence of rhamnolipid mediated degradation of petroleum crude oil by indigenous Pseudomonas sp. WD23 in seawater.

Authors :
Goveas LC
Selvaraj R
Vinayagam R
Alsaiari AA
Alharthi NS
Sajankila SP
Source :
Chemosphere [Chemosphere] 2022 Oct; Vol. 304, pp. 135235. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jun 05.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Effect of oil spills on living forms demands for safe, ecofriendly and cost-effective methods to repair the damage. Pseudomonads have exceptional tolerance to xenobiotics and can grow at varied environmental conditions. This study aims at biosurfactant mediated degradation of petroleum crude oil by an indigenous Pseudomonas sp. WD23 in sea water. Pseudomonas sp. WD23 degraded 34% of petroleum crude oil (1.0% v/v) on supplementation of yeast extract (0.05 g/L) with glucose (1.0 g/L) in seawater. The strain produced a biosurfactant which was confirmed as a rhamnolipid (lipid: rhamnose 1:3.35) by FT-IR, LCMS and quantitative analysis. Produced rhamnolipid had low CMC (20.0 mg/L), emulsified petroleum oils (75-80%) and had high tolreance to varied conditions of pH, temperature and ionic strength. OFAT studies were performed to analyse the effect of petroleum crude oil, glucose, inoculum, yeast extract, pH, agitation speed and incubation time on degradation by Pseudomonas sp. WD23. Petroleum crude oil and glucose had significant effect on biodegradation, rhamnolipid production and growth, further optimized by central composite design. At optimum conditions of 3.414% v/v PCO and 6.53 g/L glucose, maximum degradation of 81.8 ± 0.67% was observed at pH 7.5, 100 RPM, 15.0% v/v inoculum in 28 days, with a 3-fold increase in biodegradation. GCMS analysis revealed degradation (86-100%) of all low and high molecular weight hydrocarbons present in petroleum crude oil. Hence, the strain Pseudomonas sp. WD23 can be effectively developed for management of oil spills in seas and oceans due to its excellent degradation abilities.<br /> (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-1298
Volume :
304
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35675868
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.135235