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Recent progresses and perspectives of polyethylene biodegradation by bacteria and fungi: A review

Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 2025 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Yun Kong, Renjuan Wang, Zhou Qingyun, Jiamiao Li, Yimeng Fan, Qi Chen

Summary

This review examines the current state of polyethylene biodegradation by bacteria and fungi, one of the most widely used and difficult-to-degrade plastics. Researchers found that factors such as surface hydrophobicity, physical pretreatment, and environmental conditions significantly influence microbial degradation rates, with biodegradation involving biofilm formation, fragmentation, and eventual mineralization.

Polymers

Plastics pollution has become a serious threat to the people and environment due to the mass production, unreasonable disposal and continuous pollution. Polyethylene (PE), one of the most utilized plastics all over the world, is considered as a highly recalcitrant environmental destruction problem on account of strong hydrophobicity and high molecular weight. Therefore, it is urgently necessary to seek economical and efficient treatment and disposal methods for PE. Considering microorganisms can use various carbon sources for anabolism, they are recognized to have great potential in the biodegradation of microplastics including PE. From this point of view, the present review concentrates on providing information regarding the current status of PE biodegradation microorganisms (bacteria and fungi), and the influencing factors such as PE characteristics, cellular surface hydrophobicity, physical treatments, chemicals addition, as well as environmental conditions for biodegradation are thoroughly discussed. Furthermore, the possible biodegradation mechanisms for PE involve the biofilm formation, biodeterioration, fragmentation, assimilation, and mineralization are elucidated in detail. Finally, the future research directions and application prospects of microbial degradation are prospected in this review. It is expected to provide reference and guidance for PE biodegradation and their potential applications in real contaminated sites.

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