Use of sustainable chemistry to produce an acyl amino acid surfactant

Surfactants find wide commercial use as foaming agents, emulsifiers, and dispersants. Currently, surfactants are produced from petroleum, or from seed oils such as palm or coconut oil. Due to concerns with CO₂ emissions and the need to protect rainforests, there is a growing necessity to manufacture...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied microbiology and biotechnology 2010-05, Vol.86 (5), p.1387-1397
Hauptverfasser: Reznik, Gabriel O, Vishwanath, Prashanth, Pynn, Michelle A, Sitnik, Joy M, Todd, Jeffrey J, Wu, Jun, Jiang, Yan, Keenan, Brendan G, Castle, Andrew B, Haskell, Richard F, Smith, Temple F, Somasundaran, Ponisseril, Jarrell, Kevin A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Surfactants find wide commercial use as foaming agents, emulsifiers, and dispersants. Currently, surfactants are produced from petroleum, or from seed oils such as palm or coconut oil. Due to concerns with CO₂ emissions and the need to protect rainforests, there is a growing necessity to manufacture these chemicals using sustainable resources In this report, we describe the engineering of a native nonribosomal peptide synthetase pathway (i.e., surfactin synthetase), to generate a Bacillus strain that synthesizes a highly water-soluble acyl amino acid surfactant, rather than the water insoluble lipopeptide surfactin. This novel product has a lower CMC and higher water solubility than myristoyl glutamate, a commercial surfactant. This surfactant is produced by fermentation of cellulosic carbohydrate as feedstock. This method of surfactant production provides an approach to sustainable manufacturing of new surfactants.
ISSN:0175-7598
1432-0614
DOI:10.1007/s00253-009-2431-8