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Biodegradation of polystyrene microplastics by superworms (larve of Zophobas atratus): Gut microbiota transition, and putative metabolic ways

Chemosphere 2023 17 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.
Zhimin Liu, Zhaolin Quan, Zhaolin Quan, Zhaolin Quan, Weijun Wang, Zhimin Liu, Zhimin Liu, Zhaolin Quan, Weijun Wang, Shunyu Yao, Shunyu Yao, Zixi Zhao, Zixi Zhao, Xiaolu Liu Zixi Zhao, Weijun Wang, Zhimin Liu, Weijun Wang, Shunyu Yao, Weijun Wang, Zhimin Liu, Shunyu Yao, Huiren Liu, Xiaoqiu Lin, Hai Yan, Huiren Liu, Xiaoqiu Lin, Qing X. Li, Xiaoqiu Lin, Xiaolu Liu Xiaoqiu Lin, Qing X. Li, Xiaolu Liu Hai Yan, Xiaolu Liu

Summary

Researchers fed polystyrene microplastics to superworms (Zophobas atratus larvae) and found reduced survival and weight, along with major shifts in gut microbial communities including an increase in Hafnia-Obesumbacterium. Metabolomic analysis identified three metabolic pathways through which superworm gut microbes break down polystyrene.

Polymers
Study Type In vitro

Superworm (larve of Zophobas atratus) could consume foams of expanded polystyrene plastics. However, there is no sufficient understanding of the impact of microplastics on superworms and the degradation pathways of polystyrene. Herein, we explored the weight and survival change of superworms while fed with polystyrene microplastics, and found that survival rate and mean weight would reduce. In terms of gut microbial community structure of surperworms, significant shifts were detected with the relative abundance of Hafnia-Obesumbacterium sp. increasing. In addition, we domesticated two microbiota from the gut of superworms, and confirmed their ability to degrade PS in vitro. The last but most important, 1291 metabolites were identified by HPLC-TOF-MS/MS, and six metabolites related to polystyrene degradation were identified through comparative metabolomic analysis. According to the content and pathways of these metabolites, three metabolic pathways of polystyrene were (a) styrene-phenylacetyl-CoA-L-2-aminoadipic acid; (b) styrene-phenylacetyl-CoA-benzaldehyde; (c) styrene-2-hydroxyacetophenone. These results would help to further screen bacteria of PS degradation and investigate PS metabolic pathways in invertebrates.

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