Selective Partition of Lipopeptides from Fermentation Broth: A Green and Sustainable Approach

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Abstract

Lipopeptide (LP) biosurfactants from microbes have the potential to gradually replace chemical synthetic surfactants and fit the contemporary green and sustainable industrial production concept. However, their active participation is comparatively low in the global market pertaining to their low yield in microbial broth and costly downstream processes arising due to tedious isolation and purification methods. Herein, an efficient extraction method is developed that utilizes an aqueous biphasic system (ABS) comprising ionic liquids and polypropylene glycol 400 (PPG) to selectively extract a mixture of cyclic lipopeptides, namely, surfactin and fengycin from the culture broth of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens 5NPA-1, isolated from the halophyte Salicornia brachiata Roxb. Out of four different ABSs, the ABS composed of 2-hydroxyethyl ammonium formate and PPG displayed a maximum extraction efficiency of 82.30%. PPG-rich phase containing lipopeptides exhibited excellent antimicrobial and mosquito larvicidal properties with no toxic effect on plants. The developed method is simple, novel and accelerates the application of cyclic lipopeptides produced by the microbial source.

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Singh, S., Sequeira, R. A., Kumar, P., Ghadge, V. A., Vaghela, P., Mohanty, A. K., … Shinde, P. B. (2022). Selective Partition of Lipopeptides from Fermentation Broth: A Green and Sustainable Approach. ACS Omega, 7(50), 46646–46652. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c05587

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