Publication | Closed Access
Isolation, characterization, and antifungal application of a biosurfactant produced by <i>Enterobacter</i> sp. MS16
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Citations
29
References
2011
Year
Antifungal ApplicationBiomanufacturingAntifungal AgentIn Vitro FermentationAbstract Isolate Ms16MedicineBiorefinery ProductSurface TensionBiotechnologyFood BioprocessingMicrobiologyAntimicrobial CompoundSeed ProcessingBiosurfactant ProductionFood PreservativesClinical MicrobiologySoil BiotechnologyHealth Sciences
Abstract Isolate MS16 obtained from diesel contaminated soil, identified as Enterobacter sp. using 16S rRNA gene analysis produced biosurfactant when grown on unconventional substrates like groundnut oil cake, sunflower oil, and molasses. Of these carbon substrates used, sunflower oil cake showed highest biosurfactant production (1.5 g/L) and reduction in surface tension (68%). The biosurfactant produced by MS16 efficiently emulsified various hydrocarbons. The carbohydrates and fatty acids of the biosurfactants were studied using TLC, FTIR, NMR, and GC‐MS. The carbohydrate composition as determined by GC‐MS of their alditol acetate derivatives showed the predominance of glucose, galactose and arabinose, and hydroxyl fatty acids of chain length of C 16 and C 18 on the basis of FAMEs analysis. Biosurfactant showed antifungal activity and inhibited the fungal spore germination. Practical applications : Enterobacter sp., MS16 produces a biosurfactant composed of carbohydrates and fatty acids which exhibits excellent surface active properties. Use of industrial wastes for biosurfactant production is economical and facilitates the industrial production of this biosurfactant which has potential antifungal activity.
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