0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Nature-Inspired Strategies for Sustainable Degradation of Synthetic Plastics

JACS Au 2024 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sreeahila Retnadhas, Daniel C. Ducat, Eric L. Hegg

Summary

This review examines nature-inspired biological strategies for breaking down synthetic plastics, including enzyme engineering and microbial approaches. The study suggests that mimicking natural degradation processes could overcome the chemical and physical barriers that make plastics resistant to breakdown, offering a path toward more sustainable plastic waste management.

Polymers

Synthetic plastics have become integral to our daily lives, yet their escalating production, limited biodegradability, and inadequate waste management contribute to environmental contamination. Biological plastic degradation is one promising strategy to address this pollution. The inherent chemical and physical properties of synthetic plastics, however, pose challenges for microbial enzymes, hindering the effective degradation and the development of a sustainable biological recycling process. This Perspective explores alternative, nature-inspired strategies designed to overcome some key limitations in currently available plastic-degrading enzymes. Nature's refined degradation pathways for natural polymers, such as cellulose, present a compelling framework for the development of efficient technologies for enzymatic plastic degradation. By drawing insights from nature, we propose a general strategy of employing substrate binding domains to improve targeting and multienzyme scaffolds to overcome enzymatic efficiency limitations. As one potential application, we outline a multienzyme pathway to upcycle polyethylene into alkenes. Employing nature-inspired strategies can present a path toward sustainable solution to the environmental impact of synthetic plastics.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microbial plastic degradation: enzymes, pathways, challenges, and perspectives.

This review synthesizes current knowledge on microbial plastic degradation, covering the enzymes and metabolic pathways involved in breaking down major synthetic polymers, the challenges limiting efficient biodegradation, and perspectives for engineering improved microbial solutions to plastic waste.

Article Tier 2

Enzymes to make plastics disappear

This review article discusses the problem of plastic waste accumulating in the environment, including the formation of microplastics, and explores the potential of engineered enzymes to break down synthetic polymers as a biological solution to plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Role of Novel Biological Agents in Plastic Degradation and Mitigation Approach towards Bioplastics

This review examines the role of novel biological agents — including bacteria, fungi, and engineered microorganisms — in degrading synthetic plastics and proposes bioplastics as a mitigation strategy to reduce persistent polymer accumulation in the environment. The authors outline the enzymatic mechanisms involved in breaking down major plastic types and discuss the potential of combining biological degradation with bioplastic adoption.

Article Tier 2

Biological Degradation of Plastics and Microplastics: A Recent Perspective on Associated Mechanisms and Influencing Factors

This review looks at how bacteria and their enzymes can break down different types of plastics and microplastics through biological processes. Understanding these natural degradation pathways is important because they could be harnessed to reduce the amount of persistent microplastic pollution that accumulates in the environment and eventually enters the human food chain.

Article Tier 2

Discovery of Plastics-degrading Enzymes

This review examines the discovery and characterization of plastic-degrading enzymes, exploring microbial strategies for breaking down synthetic polymers that persist in the environment for up to 1,000 years. The paper discusses enzyme mechanisms, substrate specificity, and the potential of biological degradation to address the global plastic waste crisis driven by poor recycling practices.

Share this paper