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Plastic biodegradation: do Galleria mellonella larvae - bio-assimilate polyethylene? A spectral histology approach using isotopic labelling and infrared microspectroscopy
Summary
This study tested whether greater wax moth larvae (Galleria mellonella) can biodegrade polyethylene plastic by using isotopic labeling and infrared microspectroscopy to track carbon transfer from plastic to larval tissues. The results evaluate whether physical chewing by larvae constitutes true biochemical assimilation of plastic.
ABSTRACT Environmental pollution by non-biodegradable polyethylene (PE) plastics is of major concern, thus, organisms capable of bio-degrading PE are required. The larvae of the Greater Wax Moth, Galleria mellonella (Gm), were identified as a potential candidate to digest PE. In this study, we tested whether PE was metabolized by Gm larvae and could found in their tissues. We examined the implication of the larval gut microbiota by using conventional and axenic reared insects. First, our study showed that neither beeswax nor PE alone favour the growth of young larvae. We then used Fourier-Transform Infrared Microspectroscopy (µFTIR) to detect deuterium in larvae fed with isotopically labelled food. Perdeuterated molecules were found in most tissues of larvae fed with deuterium labelled oil for 72 hours proving that µFTIR can detect metabolization of 1-2 mg of deuterated food. No bio-assimilation was detected in the tissues of larvae fed with 1-5 mg of perdeuterated PED4 for 72 hours and 19-21 days, but micron sized PE particles were found in the larval digestive tract cavities. We evidenced weak bio-degradation of PE films in contact for 24 hours with the dissected gut of conventional larvae; and in the PED4 particles from excreted larval frass. Our study confirms that Gm larvae can bio-degrade PE but can not necessarily metabolize it.