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Microbial Ecotoxicology of Marine Plastic Debris: A Review on Colonization and Biodegradation by the “Plastisphere”

Hellenic Journal of Cardiology 2019 477 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Justine Jacquin, Jingguang Cheng, Charlène Odobel, Caroline Pandin, Conan, Pascal, Pujo-Pay, Mireille, Valérie Barbe, Anne‐Leïla Meistertzheim, Jean-François, Ghiglione

Summary

This review synthesizes 15 years of research on microbial life colonizing marine plastic debris, known as the plastisphere, examining how plastic pollution affects microbial communities and how microorganisms influence plastic degradation. The authors identify key knowledge gaps regarding plastic biodegradation pathways and the potential for plastic debris to serve as a vector for dispersing harmful pathogens.

Over the last decades, it has become clear that plastic pollution presents a global societal and environmental challenge given its increasing presence in the oceans. A growing literature has focused on the microbial life growing on the surfaces of these pollutants called the "plastisphere," but the general concepts of microbial ecotoxicology have only rarely been integrated. Microbial ecotoxicology deals with (i) the impact of pollutants on microbial communities and inversely (ii) how much microbes can influence their biodegradation. The goal of this review is to enlighten the growing literature of the last 15 years on microbial ecotoxicology related to plastic pollution in the oceans. First, we focus on the impact of plastic on marine microbial life and on the various functions it ensures in the ecosystems. In this part, we also discuss the driving factors influencing biofilm development on plastic surfaces and the potential role of plastic debris as vector for dispersal of harmful pathogen species. Second, we give a critical view of the extent to which marine microorganisms can participate in the decomposition of plastic in the oceans and of the relevance of current standard tests for plastic biodegradability at sea. We highlight some examples of metabolic pathways of polymer biodegradation. We conclude with several questions regarding gaps in current knowledge of plastic biodegradation by marine microorganisms and the identification of possible directions for future research.

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