Abstract

Extraction of biosurfactants from plants is advantageous than from microbes. The properties and robustness of biosurfactant derived from the mesocarp of Balanites aegyptiaca have been reported. However, the dark brown property of biosurfactant and lack of knowledge of its biocompatibility limits its scope. In the present work, the decolorization protocol for this biosurfactant was optimized using hydrogen peroxide. The hemolytic potential and biocompatibility based on cell toxicity and proliferation were also investigated. This study is the first report on the decolorization and toxicity assay of this biosurfactant. For decolorization of biosurfactant, 34 full factorial design was used, and the data were subjected to ANOVA. Results indicate that 1.5% of hydrogen peroxide can decolorize the biosurfactant most efficiently at 40 °C in 70 min at pH 7. Mitochondrial reductase (MTT) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) assays on M5S mouse skin fibroblast cells revealed that decolorized biosurfactant up to 50 µg/mL for 6 h had no significant toxic effect. Hemolysis assay showed ~ 2.5% hemolysis of human RBCs, indicating the nontoxic effect of this biosurfactant. The present work established a decolorization protocol making the biosurfactant chromatically acceptable. Biocompatibility assays confirm its safer use as observed by experiments on M5S skin fibroblast cells under in vitro conditions.

Highlights

  • Extraction of biosurfactants from plants is advantageous than from microbes

  • Cell toxicity assay. m5S skin fibroblast cells were cultured in alpha-MEM medium with 10% Fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1% PSN at 37 °C in a 5% C­ O2 animal cell incubator up to the sub-confluent stage

  • The transformed data were subjected to one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) at p < 0.05

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Summary

Introduction

Extraction of biosurfactants from plants is advantageous than from microbes. The properties and robustness of biosurfactant derived from the mesocarp of Balanites aegyptiaca have been reported. The decolorization protocol for this biosurfactant was optimized using hydrogen peroxide. This study is the first report on the decolorization and toxicity assay of this biosurfactant. Mitochondrial reductase (MTT) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) assays on M5S mouse skin fibroblast cells revealed that decolorized biosurfactant up to 50 μg/mL for 6 h had no significant toxic effect. Biosurfactants possess high-foaming capacity, high-biodegradability, environment-friendly, low-toxicity, lowcost[12], and par with chemically-synthesized ­surfactants[8]. They are used for environmental clean-up like bioremediation of heavy metals and oil-recovery from water and ­soil[9,13]. Saponins are nonionic and could be used in folk remedies and employed as detergents for textile c­ leaning[1,18]

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