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Direct evidence for selective microbial enrichment with plastic degradation potential in the plastisphere

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xinyi Bai, Yi Huang Xinyi Bai, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Yi Huang Mengjun Zhang, Libo Xu, Kang Li, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Libo Xu, Xinyi Bai, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Xinyi Bai, Xinyi Bai, Xinyi Bai, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Libo Xu, Xinyi Bai, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Xinyi Bai, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Libo Xu, Guangbao Zhang, Libo Xu, Guangbao Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Guangbao Zhang, Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Guangbao Zhang, Guangbao Zhang, Yi Huang Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Mengjun Zhang, Yi Huang Mengjun Zhang, Mengjun Zhang, Xinyi Bai, Xinyi Bai, Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Mengjun Zhang, Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang Yi Huang

Summary

This study provided direct experimental evidence that microplastic surfaces selectively enrich bacteria capable of degrading plastic polymers, addressing the long-standing hypothesis that the plastisphere harbors plastic-degrading microbes. Bacteria isolated from microplastic biofilms demonstrably used plastic as a carbon source, confirming that environmental microplastics actively select for and concentrate plastic-degrading communities.

Polymers

Plastisphere, characterized by microbial colonization on plastic debris, has attracted concern with its adverse environmental effects. The microbial features have been increasingly investigated; however, there lacks direct evidence for microplastics serving as carbon sources and enriching plastic-degrading microorganisms. Here, we obtained microbial communities from soil microplastics, analyzed the dissimilarity compared with soil, and characterized the plastic-degrading potential of isolates from plastisphere. Results showed the plastisphere communities significantly differed from soil communities and exhibited a higher relative abundance of Nocardia and Rhodococcus. To verify the selective enrichment of plastic-degrading microorganisms in the plastisphere, culture-based strategies were employed to evaluate the polyethylene (PE) degradation potential of two isolates Nocardia asteroides No.11 and Rhodococcus hoagii No.17. They could grow solely on PE and led to significant weight loss. FTIR and SEM analysis revealed the formation of new functional groups and the destruction of structural integrity on PE surfaces. Genes related to PE biodegradation were identified by genome-wide sequencing thus recognizing relevant enzymes and elucidating potential pathways. Overall, this report combined culture-free and culture-based approaches to confirm the plastic degradation potential of selectively enriched microorganisms in soil plastisphere, providing a positive perspective toward promoting microplastic biodegradation in farmland soil by enhancing natural microbial processes.

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