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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Deuterium Labels to Study Biodegradation of Plastics with Raman Spectroscopy

2024 Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kara Müller, Martin Elsner, Natalia P. Ivleva

Summary

Researchers used deuterium-labelled biodegradable polymers and Raman spectroscopy to track plastic degradation in soil and water systems, demonstrating that isotopic labelling provides a powerful tool for confirming genuine biodegradation versus simple fragmentation.

Polymers

Biodegradable polymers are considered one of the solutions to the plastic accumulation problem in terrestrial and aquatic systems. It is important to ensure complete degradation since residual micro- and nanoplastics influence soil health and its biota. During biodegradation, microorganisms first colonize the plastic surface, where they then excrete enzymes responsible for the depolymerization. Finally, the mono- and oligomers are utilized by the microorganisms as energy sources (mineralization into CO2) or for biomass formation. Only by studying the last step the final fate of the anthropogenic pollutant is revealed. Conventionally CO2 concentrations are measured to monitor microbial activity in samples exposed to plastics in comparison to plastic-free controls. However, this is in no direct relation to the polymer and priming effects or unknown processes due to bacteria adaptation might blur the analysis. Stable isotope labels can be traced from the polymer into 13CO2, D2O and microbial biomass to overcome those obstacles. While many publications covered 13CO2 monitoring, only Zumstein et al. additionally traced the carbon label into fungal biomass with nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry.[1] In our approach, we use deuterium instead of carbon labels due to reduced costs and enhanced availability of labeled compounds. Although we lose the ability to contribute to a closed mass balance, we use non-destructive Raman microspectroscopy to gain additional chemical information on a single cell level. Heavier isotopes lead to a red shift of the according Raman band due to their larger mass. Deuteration of microbial lipids, proteins, DNA, and carbohydrates leads to an extensive shift of C-H vibrations into the Raman-silent region. C-D vibrations can therefore be quickly detected with a facilitated data analysis.We incubated the environmental bacterium Sphingomonas koreensis with deuterated polylactic acid (dPLA) in an aqueous medium at room temperature under aerobic conditions. After 3 weeks, we observed an additional biomass spectrum for about 50 % of the measured cells besides undeuterated biomass and dPLA particles. After 13 weeks, this spectrum was already recorded for all cells. While the biomass and C‑H str. vibrations clearly indicate microbial biomass, the C-D vibrations of the additional spectra differ from reference deuterated biomass spectra obtained with glucose-d12 and D2O labeling. After comparing these untypical C-D vibrations to self-obtained and literature reference spectra, they were interpreted to originate from deuterated biomass with strongly deuterated lipids and inhibited labeling of proteins. Now that we can trace deuterium from labeled plastics into microbial biomass, we want to extend the approach to terrestrial environments. Therefore, cell isolation from the soil matrix was successfully adapted from the literature[2] to gain adequate Raman spectra. In ongoing experiments, environmental samples will first be exposed to unlabeled PLA for bacteria adaptation and then used for incubation with dPLA in soil microcosms. References:Zumstein, M.T., et al., Science Advances, 2018. 4(7): p. eaas9024. Eichorst, S.A., et al., FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2015. 91(10). Acknowledgments: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Project IV 110/2-2 and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for funding different parts of the research. Dr. Jürgen Allgaier (FZ Jülich) for providing the deuterated PLA.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Raman Microspectroscopy to Trace the Incorporation of Deuterium from Labeled (Micro)Plastics into Microbial Cells.

Researchers applied stable isotope resonance Raman microspectroscopy at the single-cell level to trace the incorporation of deuterium from labeled (micro)plastics into microbial cells, demonstrating a novel method for tracking microbial degradation of plastics at the cellular level.

Article Tier 2

Study on Rapid Recognition of Marine Microplastics Based on Raman Spectroscopy

Researchers developed a rapid identification system for marine microplastics using Raman spectroscopy, enabling quick determination of plastic type and size. Fast, accurate identification tools are critical for monitoring the growing problem of microplastic pollution in ocean environments.

Article Tier 2

Applications of Raman spectroscopy for microplastic detection and characterization: a comprehensive spectral reference

This review evaluates Raman spectroscopy as a tool for detecting and identifying microplastics across water, soil, air, and biological samples. The study consolidates reference spectra for common plastic polymers and discusses recent innovations like surface-enhanced Raman techniques that improve detection sensitivity, while also addressing challenges like fluorescence interference in complex samples.

Article Tier 2

Study of the Degradation of Biobased Plastic after Stress Tests in Water

Researchers tested Raman spectroscopy as a rapid, cost-effective tool for tracking how compostable bioplastics degrade after exposure to water and stress conditions. The method successfully detected structural changes in the plastic over time. Understanding how bioplastics degrade in real environments helps verify whether they truly break down without leaving persistent microplastic fragments.

Article Tier 2

Assessment of Microplastic Degradation in Bottom Sediments Using Raman Microspectroscopy and Atomic Force Microscopy

Scientists used Raman spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy to examine how microplastics degrade in deep ocean sediments from the Arctic, Antarctic, and Pacific. They found that PET plastic in the Laptev Sea primarily degrades in its crystalline regions, while the amorphous regions remain largely intact — meaning plastic fragments in cold, deep sediments degrade very slowly and in a different pattern than previously assumed. This helps explain why microplastics accumulate in remote ocean floors and how long they persist there.

Share this paper