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Mineralization of 13C-labeled polyethylene by marine Bacillus velezensis MT9

International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kejvin Bajo, Kejvin Bajo, Kejvin Bajo, Noura Raddadi, Kejvin Bajo, Fabio Fava, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Philippe F.-X. Corvini Boris A. Kolvenbach, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Fabio Fava, Fabio Fava, Noura Raddadi, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Philippe F.-X. Corvini Philippe F.-X. Corvini Philippe F.-X. Corvini Boris A. Kolvenbach, Noura Raddadi, Boris A. Kolvenbach, Philippe F.-X. Corvini Philippe F.-X. Corvini Philippe F.-X. Corvini

Summary

Using carbon-13 isotope tracing, researchers confirmed that the marine bacterium Bacillus velezensis MT9 can genuinely mineralize polyethylene — converting solid plastic into carbon dioxide — with UV pre-treatment of the plastic enhancing degradation. This is direct evidence of true bacterial biodegradation of the world's most abundant plastic, offering a potential biological route for remediating PE microplastics in marine environments.

Polymers

In the marine environment, plastic debris breaks down into smaller entities known as microplastics. Polyethylene (PE) is the main source of microplastics. In a previous study, we showed that marine Bacillus MT9 and Vreelandella strains (MT1, MT11) were able to degrade untreated PE based on SEM, gravimetric weight loss and FTIR analysis. In this study, we performed stable isotope tracing assays, measuring the production of 13 CO 2 from 13 C-PE powder (untreated or UV-treated) incubated with B. velezensis MT9, V. titanicae MT11 or V. venusta MT1 isolates under aerobic conditions in the presence and absence of yeast extract as co-nutrient source. Only B. velezensis MT9 exhibited mineralization activities towards untreated and UV-treated 13 C-PE with the highest 13 C-mass loss of 0.199% recorded for UV-treated 13 C-PE with yeast extract, after 14 days incubation. In this study, we demonstrated the mineralization of 13 C-PE by B. velezensis MT9. Furthermore, we also confirmed that photodegradation of plastic is a key process to enhance the biodegradation of PE. These findings suggest that Bacillus sp. could potentially degrade PE plastic waste in marine environment, as they can slowly mineralize PE even when other nutrients are present. • Bacterial 13 C-PE mineralization was evaluated by stable isotope tracing assays. • Bacillus velezensis MT9 mineralizes Untreated and UV-treated 13 C-PE powder. • Up to 0.199% mass loss was observed for UV-treated 13 C-PE in 14 days. • UV and yeast extract enhanced 13 C-PE mineralization by B. velezensis . • Vreelandella cultures showed no mineralization activities toward untreated 13 C-PE.

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