Abstract
To investigate the effects of physiological properties on polycyclic aromatic compound (PAH) degradation, the surface tension and emulsification activities, and cell surface hydrophobicity of five PAH-degrading yeast isolates were compared to Saccharomyces cerevisiae from cultures grown with glucose, hexadecane, or naphthalene as carbon sources. The cell surface hydrophobicity values for the five yeast strains were significantly higher than for S. cerevisiae for all culture conditions, although these were highest with hexadecane and naphthalene. Strains with higher hydrophobicity showed higher rates of naphthalene and phenanthrene degradation, indicating that increased cell hydrophobicity might be an important strategy in PAH degradation for the five strains. Emulsification activities increased for all five yeast strains with naphthalene culturing, although no relationship existed between emulsification activity and PAH degradation rate. Surface tensions were not markedly reduced with naphthalene culturing.
Research Abstract
Research Department
Research Journal
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Research Member
Research Publisher
Springer
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Volume 86, Issue 6
Research Website
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00253-010-2477-7
Research Year
2010
Research Pages
pp 1933–1939