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Cockroach Blaptica dubia biodegrades polystyrene plastics: Insights for superior ability, microbiome and host genes
Summary
Researchers discovered that the cockroach species Blaptica dubia can effectively biodegrade polystyrene plastic, digesting nearly half of ingested material within 24 hours. They identified specific gut bacteria and enzymes responsible for breaking down the plastic polymer chains. The finding opens up new possibilities for biological approaches to plastic waste management using insect-microbiome systems.
The report demonstrated that a member of cockroach family, Blaptica dubia (Blattodea: Blaberidae) biodegraded commercial polystyrene (PS) plastics with M of 20.3 kDa and M of 284.9 kDa. The cockroaches digested up to 46.6 % of ingested PS within 24 h. The biodegradation was confirmed by the C isotopic shift of the residual PS in feces versus pristine PS (Δ δC of 2.28 ‰), reduction of molecular weight and formation of oxidative functional groups in the residual PS. Further tests found that B.dubia cockroaches degraded all eight high purity PS microplastics with low to ultra-high molecular weights (MW) at 0.88, 1.20, 3.92, 9.55, 62.5, 90.9, 524.0, and 1040 kDa, respectively, with superior biodegradation ability. PS depolymerization/biodegradation pattern was MW-dependent. Ingestion of PS shifted gut microbial communities and elevated abundances of plastic-degrading bacterial genes. Genomic, transcriptomic and metabolite analyses indicated that both gut microbes and cockroach host contributed to digestive enzymatic degradation. PS plastic diet promoted a highly cooperative model of gut digestive system. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis revealed different PS degradation patterns with distinct MW profiles in B. dubia. These results have provided strong evidences of plastic-degrading ability of cockroaches or Blaberidae family and new understanding of insect and their microbe mediated biodegradation of plastics.