Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity

A bacterial strain UKMP‐10M2 isolated from a Malaysian petroleum refinery was able to degrade 84% of heavy Khafji sour crude and 68% of light Tapis sweet crude within seven days. Analysis of gas chromatography‐flame ionization detector chromatograms show the strain UKMP‐10M2 degraded up to 90% prist...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kok, Kee W, Hamzah, A
Format: Article
Published: SpringerLink 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.intimal.edu.my/1163/
_version_ 1848766662913818624
author Kok, Kee W
Hamzah, A
author_facet Kok, Kee W
Hamzah, A
author_sort Kok, Kee W
building INTI Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A bacterial strain UKMP‐10M2 isolated from a Malaysian petroleum refinery was able to degrade 84% of heavy Khafji sour crude and 68% of light Tapis sweet crude within seven days. Analysis of gas chromatography‐flame ionization detector chromatograms show the strain UKMP‐10M2 degraded up to 90% pristane and 50% phytane in heavy crude, but significantly lower pristane (50%) and phytane (30%) were degraded from the light crude. A mixture of aliphatic hexadecane and three‐ring phenanthrene better supported the growth of isolate UKMP‐10M2 compared to using phenanthrene alone, suggesting cometabolism influenced how crude oil with different individual hydrocarbon contents affected the degradation. Peptone as the source of nitrogen increases the emulsifying index in UKMP‐10M2 exposed to heavy Khafji sour crude 20% higher than in light Tapis sweet crude. However, BATH assay showed the same nitrogen source increases bacterial cell surface hydrophobicity of UKMP‐10M2 up to 14% higher in light Tapis crude oil compared to heavy Khafji. This study suggest the nitrogen source plays a decisive role in elevating UKMP‐10M2 bacterial cells hydrophobicity, and in correlation with types of crude oil. Phylogenetic tree analysis based on 16S rDNA sequence results identified the strain to be Rhodococcus ruber.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:54:43Z
format Article
id intimal-1163
institution INTI International University
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:54:43Z
publishDate 2018
publisher SpringerLink
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling intimal-11632020-10-20T04:07:10Z http://eprints.intimal.edu.my/1163/ Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity Kok, Kee W Hamzah, A HB Economic Theory HF Commerce A bacterial strain UKMP‐10M2 isolated from a Malaysian petroleum refinery was able to degrade 84% of heavy Khafji sour crude and 68% of light Tapis sweet crude within seven days. Analysis of gas chromatography‐flame ionization detector chromatograms show the strain UKMP‐10M2 degraded up to 90% pristane and 50% phytane in heavy crude, but significantly lower pristane (50%) and phytane (30%) were degraded from the light crude. A mixture of aliphatic hexadecane and three‐ring phenanthrene better supported the growth of isolate UKMP‐10M2 compared to using phenanthrene alone, suggesting cometabolism influenced how crude oil with different individual hydrocarbon contents affected the degradation. Peptone as the source of nitrogen increases the emulsifying index in UKMP‐10M2 exposed to heavy Khafji sour crude 20% higher than in light Tapis sweet crude. However, BATH assay showed the same nitrogen source increases bacterial cell surface hydrophobicity of UKMP‐10M2 up to 14% higher in light Tapis crude oil compared to heavy Khafji. This study suggest the nitrogen source plays a decisive role in elevating UKMP‐10M2 bacterial cells hydrophobicity, and in correlation with types of crude oil. Phylogenetic tree analysis based on 16S rDNA sequence results identified the strain to be Rhodococcus ruber. SpringerLink 2018 Article PeerReviewed Kok, Kee W and Hamzah, A (2018) Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity. Remediation, 28 (4). ISSN 10515658 https://doi.org/10.1002/rem.21574
spellingShingle HB Economic Theory
HF Commerce
Kok, Kee W
Hamzah, A
Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title_full Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title_fullStr Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title_full_unstemmed Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title_short Comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
title_sort comparative degradation between heavy and light crude oil mediated by nitrogen‐induced cell‐surface hydrophobicity
topic HB Economic Theory
HF Commerce
url http://eprints.intimal.edu.my/1163/
http://eprints.intimal.edu.my/1163/