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Biosurfactants for a Sustainable Future


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       Nazim F. Islam and Hemen Sarma

       Department of Botany, N N Saikia College, Titabar, Assam, India

      CHAPTER MENU

      1  2.1 Introduction

      2  2.2 Metagenomics Application: A State-of-the-Art Technique

      3  2.3 Hydrocarbon-Degrading Bacteria and Genes

      4  2.4 Metagenomic Approaches in the Selection of Biosurfactant-Producing Microbes

      5  2.5 Metagenomics with Stable Isotope Probe (SIP) Techniques

      6  2.6 Screening Methods to Identify Features of Biosurfactants

      7  2.7 Functional Metagenomics: Challenge and Opportunities 2.7.1 Single vs Multiple Host Expression System 2.7.2 Metagenomic Clone Libraries

      8  2.8 Conclusion

      9  Acknowledgements

      10  References

      Biosurfactants are generally classified into a low or a high molecular weight group based on their chemical nature. Low molecular weight surfactants are widely used to lower surface‐to‐surface stress, while high molecular weight surfactants are generally used as emulsifiers and stabilizers [6]. For details of the composition, classification, critical concentration of micellization (CMC) values and properties of biosurfactants, see Chapter 1.

      Microbe‐derived surfactants appear to display a performance similar to synthetic surfactants [7]. While synthetic surfactants are commercially preferred during industrial applications, their use leads to the development of undesirable environmental pollutants [5, 8]. The majority of synthetic surfactants such as linear alkylbenzene sulfonate (LABS) are non‐biodegradable with adverse environmental effects. Contrary to these, biosurfactants are less persistent and biodegradable in the environment owing to their biological origins [9]. In addition, most biosurfactants are active in a wide range of temperatures, pH and other environmental conditions [10].

      Microbiologically derived surfactants have been widely used in industries such as emulsifiers, dispersants, foaming agents, and wetting agents [11], with a lower CMC value, which improve their performance over synthetic surfactants [12]. Some common sustainable applications of biosurfactants in the environment and in biomedicine (bioremediation, medical technology, food processing and pharmaceutical formulations, and cosmetics) are discussed in more detail in Chapters 5, 10, 11, and 19.

      Many microorganisms, which are potential producers of biosurfactants, inhabit oil‐contaminated soil in and around oil fields. One of the major hindrances for the discovery of novel biosurfactant‐producing strains is the isolation and cultivation of biosurfactant‐producing microbes. The metagenomics approach allows for the extraction of DNA (eDNA) from the environmental DNA pool and the screening for biosurfactant‐producing genes [13]. The