The possible involvement of the cell surface in aliphatic hydrocarbon utilization by an oil-degrading yeast, Yarrowia lipolytica 180 SCIE SCOPUS

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Title
The possible involvement of the cell surface in aliphatic hydrocarbon utilization by an oil-degrading yeast, Yarrowia lipolytica 180
Author(s)
Kim, TH; Oh, YS; Kim, SJ
Alternative Author(s)
김상진
Publication Year
2000-06
Abstract
An oil-degrading yeast, Yarrowia lipolytica 180, exhibits interesting cell surface characteristics under the growth on hydrocarbons. An electron microscopic study revealed that the cells grown on crude oil showed protrusions on the cell surface, and thicker periplasmic space and cell wall than the cells grown on glucose. Y. lipolytica cells lost its cell hydrophobicity after pronase (0.1 mg/ml) treatment. The strain produced two types of emulsifying materials during the growth on hydrocarbons; one was water-soluble extracellular materials and the other was cell wall-associated materials. Both emulsifying materials at lower concentration (0.12%) enhanced the oil-degrading activity of Moraxella sp. K12-7, which had medium emulsifying activity and negative cell hydrophobicity; however, it inhibited the oil-degrading activity of Pseudomonas sp. K12-5, which had medium emulsifying activity and cell hydrophobicity. These results suggest that the oil-degrading activity of Y. lipolytica 180 is closely associated with cell surface structure, and that a finely controlled application of Y. lipolytica 180 in combination with other oil-degrading microorganisms showed a possible enhancing efficiency of oil degradation.
ISSN
1017-7825
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/6056
Bibliographic Citation
JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, v.10, no.3, pp.333 - 337, 2000
Publisher
SPRINGER-VERLAG SINGAPORE PTE LTD
Subject
RHAMNOLIPID BIOSURFACTANT; SYNTHETIC SURFACTANTS; BIODEGRADATION; HYDROPHOBICITY; DEGRADATION; HEXADECANE; ADHERENCE; GROWTH
Keywords
Yarrowia lipolytica 180; bioemulsification; cell hydrophobicity; aliphatic hydrocarbon; biodegradation
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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