Superfund Research Program

Novel Applications of Microbially-Produced Surfactants

Release Date: 11/02/2004

Diverse groups of bacteria and fungi produce surfactants, generally to increase the bioavailability of carbon sources or to aid in attachment/detachment to surfaces. These biosurfactants are amphiphilic molecules with a polar, hydrophilic "head" group and a nonpolar, hydrophobic "tail" group. Biosurfactants represent potential tools for a wide variety of environmental, biotechnological, and industrial applications. Dr. Raina Maier at the University of Arizona SBRP heads a research program exploring potential uses for biosurfactants, a class of compounds that have several potential advantages over their synthetic relatives:

  1. Biosurfactants are biodegradable
  2. Biosurfactants are considered environmentally compatible. They have limited toxicity to soil invertebrates and at low concentration have minimal impact on the physical and chemical structure of the soil.
  3. Commercial production of biosurfactants promises to be cost-effective.
  4. It may be possible to produce biosurfactants in situ at contaminated sites.
pseudomonas graphic.

Dr. Maier's SBRP research focuses on the use of biosurfactants in remediation of metal and/or organic contaminated sludges and soils and on the discovery of new biosurfactants. Recent research has shown that rhamnolipid, a biosurfactant produced by a common soil bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, can affect contaminant fate by two distinct mechanisms depending on the type of system:

  1. For metal and organic co-contaminated soils, rhamnolipid acts to mitigate metal toxicity to microbial populations in the soil, leading to increases in the rate of biodegradation of organic co-contaminants.
  2. For metal contaminated soils, formation of rhamnolipid complexes with toxic metals including cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc leads to their mobilization into the soil solution for removal by soil washing or flushing.

In a study of two historically metal-contaminated soils (Coeur d'Alene, ID, and Camp Navajo, AZ), rhamnolipid was capable of removing the readily extractable (soluble and exchangeable) metal fractions. Although overall extraction efficiency of rhamnolipid is lower than removal by ex situ soil washing agents such as HCl, DTPA, and NTA, the caustic nature of the latter destroys the normal structure and properties found in a "healthy soil." These results suggest that biosurfactants such as rhamnolipid may have application for sites that must be remediated in an environmentally sensitive manner.

Researchers in Dr. Maier's laboratory recently discovered a new biosurfactant called flavolipid, which is produced by Flavobacterium sp. Flavolipid represents an entirely new class of biosurfactants. The polar head group of flavolipid features citric acid and two cadaverine (1,5-pentanediamine) molecules. This head group is very different from those found in any of the currently reported classes of biosurfactants (glycolipids, lipoproteins, phospholipids, fatty acid salts, and polymeric biosurfactants). Flavolipid has strong surface activity and emulsifying ability. It is an effective solubilizing agent, and in a biodegradation study it enhanced biodegradation of a model organic contaminant (hexadecane) by isolates of both Flavobacterium sp and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Dr. Maier believes that this new class of biosurfactants will be of interest for potential use in a wide variety of industrial and biotechnology applications

Interestingly, Dr. Maier has been involved in development of a very different application for rhamnolipids - as a fungicide. Working with Dr. Michael Stanghellini, she determined that rhamnolipids can be used to combat fungus-like organisms that cause some of the most economically damaging plant diseases in the world. Zoosporic plant pathogens cause diseases that include root rots of citrus and pepper, downy mildew of pumpkin, cucumber, grape and pepper, and the late blight of potato, the disease associated with the 19th century Irish potato famine. Drs. Stanghellini and Maier found that the rhamnolipids control zoosporic plant diseases by disrupting the cell membrane of the zoospore, a fungal life stage which has no cell wall and is very mobile.

rhamnolipid graphic.

The rhamnolipids slice into the membrane and the zoospore explodes. The researchers patented the rhamnolipid fungicide, and in September 2004 licensed the patent to Jeneil Biosurfactant Company. The rhamnolipid fungicide is registered for use with the US EPA.

Stanghellini, M.E., R.M. Maier (Miller), S.L. Rasmussen, D-H. Kim, and Y. Zhang. 1998. Microbially Produced Rhamnolipid (Biosurfactants) for the Control of Plant Pathogenic Zoosporic Fungi. U.S. Patent No. 5,767,090.

For More Information Contact:

Raina M Maier
University of Arizona
Department of Environmental Science
Saguaro Hall 322
Tucson, Arizona 85721-0038
Phone: 520-621-7231
Email: rmaier@ag.arizona.edu

To learn more about this research, please refer to the following sources:

  • Bodour AA, Guerrero-Barajas C, Jiorle BV, Malcomson ME, Paull AK, Somogyi A, Trinh LN, Bates RB, Maier RM. 2004. Structure and characterization of flavolipids, a novel group of biosurfactants produced by Flavobacterium sp. Strain MTN11. Appl Environ Microbiol 70(1):114-120. PMID:14711632
  • Neilson JW, Artiola JF, Maier RM. 2003. Characterization of lead removal from contaminated soils by nontoxic soil-washing agents. J Environ Qual 32(3):899-908. PMID:12809290
  • Ochoa-Loza FJ, Artiola JF, Maier RM. 2001. Stability constants for the complexation of various metals with a rhamnolipid biosurfactant. J Environ Qual 30(2):479-485. PMID:11285908
  • Stanghellini ME, Maier RM. 1997. Biosurfactants: their identity and potential efficacy in the biological control of zoosporic plant pathogens. Plant Disease 81:4-12.

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