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Biodegradative Activities of Fungal Strains Isolated from Terrestrial Environments in Korea

Revista Colombiana de Cirugía 2021 28 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Seung‐Yeol Lee, Leonid N. Ten, Kallol Das, Young‐Hyun You, Hee–Young Jung

Summary

Researchers screened 30 fungal strains from Korean terrestrial environments and identified five capable of degrading bioplastics PLA and/or PCL, including first-reported biodegraders among Apiotrichum and Fusicolla species, expanding the toolkit of microorganisms that can break down commercially produced biodegradable plastics.

Polymers

Polylactic acid (PLA) and polycaprolactone (PCL) are commercially available bioplastics that are exploited worldwide, and both are biodegradable. The PLA and PCL polymer-degrading activity of 30 fungal strains that were isolated from terrestrial environments were screened based on the formation of a clear zone around fungal colonies on agar plates containing emulsified PLA or PCL. Among them, five strains yielded positive results of biodegradation. Strains Korean Agricultural Culture Collection (KACC) 83034BP and KNUF-20-PPH03 exhibited PCL degradation; two other strains, KACC 83035BP and KNUF-20-PDG05, degraded PLA; and the fifth strain, KACC 83036BP, biodegraded both tested plastics. Based on phylogenetic analyses using various combinations of the sequences of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, RPB2, LSU, CAL, and β-TUB genes, the above-mentioned strains were identified as Apiotrichum porosum, Penicillium samsonianum, Talaromyces pinophilus, Purpureocillium lilacinum, and Fusicolla acetilerea, respectively. Based on our knowledge, this is the first report on (i) plastic biodegraders among Apiotrichum and Fusicolla species, (ii) the capability of T. pinophilus to degrade biodegradable plastics, (iii) the biodegradative activity of P. samsonianum against PCL, and (iv) the accurate identification of P. lilacinum as a PLA biodegrader. Further studies should be conducted to determine how the fungal species can be utilized in Korea.

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