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Mycobacteriaceae Mineralizes Micropolyethylene in Riverine Ecosystems

Environmental Science & Technology 2022 36 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Xiaoxu Sun, Zhen‐Yu Chen, Tianle Kong, Zheng Chen, Yiran Dong, Max Kolton, Zhiguo Cao, Xin Zhang, Haihan Zhang, Guoqiang Liu, Pin Gao, Yang Nie, Yang Nie, Ling Lan, Yating Xu, Weimin Sun

Summary

Researchers provided direct evidence that Mycobacteriaceae bacteria in the heavily polluted Pearl River can mineralize micropolyethylene into CO2, identifying specific Actinobacteria groups responsible and demonstrating true biodegradation rather than mere surface fragmentation.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MP) contamination is a serious global environmental problem. Plastic contamination has attracted extensive attention during the past decades. While physiochemical weathering may influence the properties of MPs, biodegradation by microorganisms could ultimately mineralize plastics into CO2. Compared to the well-studied marine ecosystems, the MP biodegradation process in riverine ecosystems, however, is less understood. The current study focuses on the MP biodegradation in one of the world's most plastic contaminated rivers, Pearl River, using micropolyethylene (mPE) as a model substrate. Mineralization of 13C-labeled mPE into 13CO2 provided direct evidence of mPE biodegradation by indigenous microorganisms. Several Actinobacteriota genera were identified as putative mPE degraders. Furthermore, two Mycobacteriaceae isolates related to the putative mPE degraders, Mycobacterium sp. mPE3 and Nocardia sp. mPE12, were retrieved, and their ability to mineralize 13C-mPE into 13CO2 was confirmed. Pangenomic analysis reveals that the genes related to the proposed mPE biodegradation pathway are shared by members of Mycobacteriaceae. While both Mycobacterium and Nocardia are known for their pathogenicity, these populations on the plastisphere in this study were likely nonpathogenic as they lacked virulence factors. The current study provided direct evidence for MP mineralization by indigenous biodegraders and predicted their biodegradation pathway, which may be harnessed to improve bioremediation of MPs in urban rivers.

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