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. Sign in to save

Microplastic accelerate the phosphorus-related metabolism of bacteria to promote the decomposition of methylphosphonate to methane

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Junhong Li, Chan Yu, Chan Yu, Zeqin Liu, Yan Wang, Fei Wang

Summary

Researchers found that microplastics accelerate phosphorus-related metabolism in marine bacteria, promoting the decomposition of methylphosphonate to methane in oxygenated water and revealing a previously unknown mechanism linking plastic pollution to greenhouse gas production.

Microplastic (MP) contaminants in marine water have become a global public health concern because of their persistence and potentially adverse effects on organisms. MP can affect the growth and metabolism of marine microorganisms and further impact the microbial environmental functions. The molecular impact mechanisms of MP on specific functional microbes with the capability of decomposing methylphosphonate (MPn) to release methane (CH) in oxygenated water have rarely been reported upon. Herein, we investigated the effects of MP on microbes and concomitant methanogenesis via the microbial degradation of MPn. Furthermore, the specific perturbation was revealed at the molecular level combined with transcriptomics and metabolomics. The results showed that intracellular phosphorus utilization by MPn-degrading strain Burkholderia sp. HQL1813 was enhanced by accelerating the catabolism of MPn. Phosphorus transport-related genes (phnG-M, pstSCAB, phnCDE) were upregulated in the MP exposure groups. Amino acid metabolism, the phosphotransferase system and nucleotide metabolism were also perturbed after MP exposure. Notably, released CH increased by 24 %, 29 % and 14 % in the exposure group. In addition, the responses of the strain were dose-independent with increasing MP doses. These findings are beneficial for clarifying the effect of MP on specific functional microbes at the molecular level and their degradation of CH by MPn.

Share this paper