| Literature DB >> 32334234 |
Yiqi Cao1, Baiyu Zhang2, Zhiwen Zhu1, Xing Song1, Qinhong Cai1, Bing Chen1, Guihua Dong1, Xudong Ye1.
Abstract
Salinity variability strongly affects the behaviors of oil degrading bacteria for spilled oil biodegradation in the marine environment. However, limited studies explored the strategies of microbes on salinity-mediated crude oil biodegradation. In this study, a halotolerant bio-emulsifier producer, Exiguobacterium sp. N41P, was examined as a model strain for Alaska North Slope (ANS) crude oil (0.5%, v/v) biodegradation. Results indicated that Exiguobacterium sp. N41P could tolerant a wide range of salinity (0-120 g/L NaCl) and achieve the highest degradation efficiency under the salinity of 15 g/L NaCl due to the highest biofilm formation ability. Moreover, increased salinity induced decreased cell surface hydrophobicity and a migration of microbial growth from oil phase to aqueous phase, leading to limited bio-emulsifier productivity and depressed degradation of insoluble long-chain n-alkanes while enhancing the degradation of relative soluble naphthalene. Research findings illustrated the microbial eco-physiological mechanism for spilled oil biodegradation under diverse salinities and advanced the understanding of sophisticated marine crude oil biodegradation process.Entities:
Keywords: Bio-emulsifiers; Cell surface hydrophobicity; Halotolerant bacteria; Salinity
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32334234 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.138723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963