Biodegradation of asphaltene by lipopeptide-biosurfactant producing hydrocarbonoclastic, crude oil degrading Bacillus spp.

Lipopeptides Surface-Active Agents Petroleum Biodegradation, Environmental Bacteria Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared Bacillus 01 natural sciences 6. Clean water Hydrocarbons 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2023.129198 Publication Date: 2023-05-17T03:57:44Z
ABSTRACT
Asphaltene is the most recalcitrant compound in crude oil. Bacteria were isolated from crude oil contaminated soil and their efficiency for hydrocarbon degradation was determined using GC-MS and isolates were screened for biosurfactant production using FT-IR. Two Bacillus spp. having hydrocarbonoclastic and lipo-peptide biosurfactant-producing abilities were experimented for their asphaltene removal potential through oil removal efficiency (ORE%) and asphaltene degradation efficiency (ADE%). B. thuringeinsis SSL1 and B. cereus SSL3 could degrade 76.4% and 67.4% of asphaltene (20 g L-1), in vitro, respectively, which is much higher than previous reports. B. thuringiensis SSL1 is recommended for effective breakdown of asphaltene, total petroleum hydrocarbon, and polyaromatic hydrocarbon degradation, aided by its biosurfactants, which is useful for crude oil cleanup. Biosurfactants are important for enhancing the availability of hydrophobic hydrocarbons to bacteria, which is beneficial for efficient crude oil remediation. These findings could lead to more effective strategies for complete clean-up of crude oil pollution.
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