4.1 Article

Petroleum Degradation, Biosurfactant and Laccase Production by Fusarium neocosmosporiellum RH-10: A Microcosm Study

Journal

SOIL & SEDIMENT CONTAMINATION
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 329-342

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15320383.2018.1473334

Keywords

Biosurfactant; crude oil; microcosm study; mycoremediation; Fusarium; neocosmosporiellum; laccase enzyme

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential of crude oil removal by fungal strains isolated from Arak refinery. The results showed that the RH10 strain is a potent strain as a surfactant producer and degrader of petrochemical hydrocarbons. The strain was identified as a Fusarium neocosmosporiellum and could degrade 58% of hydrocarbons in the minimal medium and reduce the surface tension from 45 to 26.5mN m(-1). Moreover, residual crude oil analysis with Fourier transform infrared spectrophotometry showed that this strain was able to degrade 50% of aliphatic compounds. To investigate the mechanism of degradation, oxidase enzymes were assayed and it was found that F. neocosmosporiellum can produce 1.94U L-1 of laccase in 10g L-1 crude oil. Carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and soil pattern optimization in a microcosm study showed that this strain removed 44% and 27% of the crude oil from contaminated soil in 1% and 5% crude oil concentrations, respectively. Under optimum condition, 9.66g kg(-1) crude oil was removed by F. neocosmosporiellum when the initial oil concentration was 50g kg(-1), at the end of 150days microcosm experiment. The results demonstrated the promising potential of fungi strain for cleaning of contaminated soil.

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