Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18

The increasing production of biodiesel is typically followed by the increasing number of glycerol as co-product. The abundance of glycerol will cause an environmental problem since it can be used as the carbon source for bacterial growth including pathogenic bacteria. In this study, four moderate ha...

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Main Authors: Mieke Alvonita, Rukman Hertadi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2019-01-01
Series:Indonesian Journal of Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/ijc/article/view/26737
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spelling doaj-8a425b3f29d24157aad6c4447413e13e2020-11-25T01:37:07ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaIndonesian Journal of Chemistry1411-94202460-15782019-01-01191485710.22146/ijc.2673722248Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18Mieke Alvonita0Rukman Hertadi1Department of Chemistry, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jl. Ganesha 10, Bandung 40135, West Java, IndonesiaDepartment of Chemistry, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jl. Ganesha 10, Bandung 40135, West Java, IndonesiaThe increasing production of biodiesel is typically followed by the increasing number of glycerol as co-product. The abundance of glycerol will cause an environmental problem since it can be used as the carbon source for bacterial growth including pathogenic bacteria. In this study, four moderate halophilic bacteria indigenous from Bledug Kuwu Mud Crater, Central Java, Indonesia were screened based on their capability to bioconvert glycerol to biosurfactant. This study found Halomonas elongata BK-AG18 as the potential bacterium that able to perform such bioconversion. The optimum condition for the bioconversion of glycerol into biosurfactant was attained when the bacterial inoculum was grown in the medium containing 2% (v/v) glycerol, 0.3% (w/v) urea, and 5% (w/v) NaCl at 35 °C and pH 6. The resulted biosurfactant has emulsification index (EI24) about 53.6% and CMC about 275 mg/L. Preliminary structural analysis using FTIR and 1H-NMR indicated that biosurfactant produced by H. elongata BK-AG18 was likely a glycolipid type. The biosurfactants have antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus with a minimum inhibitory concentration of 433 mg/L. Our study thus showed that H. elongata BK-AG18 was the potential halophilic bacteria that can bioconvert glycerol into glycolipid type of biosurfactant with antibacterial activity.https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/ijc/article/view/26737glycerolbiosurfactanthalophilic bacteriaHalomonas elongata BK-AG18
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mieke Alvonita
Rukman Hertadi
spellingShingle Mieke Alvonita
Rukman Hertadi
Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
Indonesian Journal of Chemistry
glycerol
biosurfactant
halophilic bacteria
Halomonas elongata BK-AG18
author_facet Mieke Alvonita
Rukman Hertadi
author_sort Mieke Alvonita
title Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
title_short Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
title_full Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
title_fullStr Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
title_full_unstemmed Bioconversion of Glycerol to Biosurfactant by Halophilic Bacteria <i>Halomonas elongata</i> BK-AG18
title_sort bioconversion of glycerol to biosurfactant by halophilic bacteria <i>halomonas elongata</i> bk-ag18
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Indonesian Journal of Chemistry
issn 1411-9420
2460-1578
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The increasing production of biodiesel is typically followed by the increasing number of glycerol as co-product. The abundance of glycerol will cause an environmental problem since it can be used as the carbon source for bacterial growth including pathogenic bacteria. In this study, four moderate halophilic bacteria indigenous from Bledug Kuwu Mud Crater, Central Java, Indonesia were screened based on their capability to bioconvert glycerol to biosurfactant. This study found Halomonas elongata BK-AG18 as the potential bacterium that able to perform such bioconversion. The optimum condition for the bioconversion of glycerol into biosurfactant was attained when the bacterial inoculum was grown in the medium containing 2% (v/v) glycerol, 0.3% (w/v) urea, and 5% (w/v) NaCl at 35 °C and pH 6. The resulted biosurfactant has emulsification index (EI24) about 53.6% and CMC about 275 mg/L. Preliminary structural analysis using FTIR and 1H-NMR indicated that biosurfactant produced by H. elongata BK-AG18 was likely a glycolipid type. The biosurfactants have antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus with a minimum inhibitory concentration of 433 mg/L. Our study thus showed that H. elongata BK-AG18 was the potential halophilic bacteria that can bioconvert glycerol into glycolipid type of biosurfactant with antibacterial activity.
topic glycerol
biosurfactant
halophilic bacteria
Halomonas elongata BK-AG18
url https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/ijc/article/view/26737
work_keys_str_mv AT miekealvonita bioconversionofglyceroltobiosurfactantbyhalophilicbacteriaihalomonaselongataibkag18
AT rukmanhertadi bioconversionofglyceroltobiosurfactantbyhalophilicbacteriaihalomonaselongataibkag18
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