4.2 Article

Studies on Biosurfactants Produced using Bacillus cereus Isolated from Seawater with Biotechnological Potential for Marine Oil-Spill Bioremediation

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURFACTANTS AND DETERGENTS
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 349-363

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jsde.12218

Keywords

Bacillus cereus; Biosurfactant; Biodegradation; Dispersion; Motor oil; Seawater

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  2. Coordination for the Evaluation and Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES)
  3. State of Pernambuco Assistance to Science and Technology Foundation (FACEPE)
  4. National Electrical Energy Agency (ANEEL)

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With the aim of producing a biotensioactive material for use in the remediation of marine environments, screening for biosurfactant-producing bacteria was conducted with strains isolated from seawater contaminated with petroleum derivatives. Gene sequencing revealed that all four promising biosurfactant-producing isolates belonged to the same genus and species, namely Bacillus cereus. The biosurfactant-producing bacteria were cultivated with different carbon (glucose, soybean oil, and waste frying soybean oil) and nitrogen (ammonium chloride, sodium nitrate, urea, and peptone) sources. B. cereus strain BCS0 was chosen as the best biosurfactant producer in a mineral medium with 2% frying oil and 0.12% peptone. Following the optimization of agitation and cultivation time, an agitation rate of 250 rpm and 48 h of cultivation were selected. Under these conditions, the surface tension was reduced to 27 mN m(-1) and the biosurfactant concentration was 3.5 g L-1. The critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the biosurfactant was defined as 500 mg L-1. The biosurfactant remained stable within large ranges of pH (2-10), salinity (2-10%), and temperature (5-120 degrees C). Under these conditions, motor oil emulsification rates were greater than 90%. Moreover, the biosurfactant properties remained unaltered after heating at 90 degrees C for 120 min. The biosurfactant enhanced the degradation of motor oil up to 96% in 27 days and exhibited considerable motor oil displacement capacity. Thus, the biosurfactant has potential in the application of remediation processes in marine environments.

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