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Biofilm development of Bacillus siamensis ATKU1 on pristine short chain low-density polyethylene: A case study on microbe-microplastics interaction

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 71 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jung‐Hwan Kwon Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Jae‐Ung Lee, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Ji‐Eun Jeong, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Han Bin Oh, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Hanbyul Lee, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Han Bin Oh, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Yerin Jung, Abhrajyoti Tarafdar, Han Bin Oh, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Han Bin Oh, Han Young Woo, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon

Summary

Researchers isolated a low-density polyethylene (LDPE)-degrading bacterial strain, Bacillus siamensis ATKU1, from a plastic dumping site and studied its biofilm formation on LDPE microplastics as the sole carbon source. Scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy confirmed biofilm development with measurable changes to surface mechanical properties, providing evidence for microbial utilisation of LDPE microplastics.

Polymers

A low-density polyethylene (LDPE) degrading bacterial strain (ATKU1) was isolated (99.86% similar with Bacillus siamensis KCTC 13613) from a plastic dumping site to study interactions between microplastics (< 5 mm) and microorganisms. The strain was found (by scanning electron microscopy) to form biofilm on the microplastic surface after its interaction with LDPE (avg. M~4,000 Da and avg. M~1,700 Da) as a sole carbon source. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) showed the biofilm's 3-D developmental patterns and significantly increased Young's modulus of the LDPE surface after microbial treatment. Most of the viable bacteria attached to biofilms rather than media, which suggested their ability to utilize LDPE. Absorption bands of carbonyl, alkenyl, acyl, ester, primary-secondary alcohol, alkene groups and nitric oxides were found on the treated LDPE particles using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry of the media indicated compositional shifts of the compounds after treatment (i.e., increase in the degree of unsaturation and increment in oxygen-to-carbon ratio) and presence of unsaturated hydrocarbons, polyketides, terpenoids, aliphatic/peptides, dicarboxylic acids, lipid-like compounds were hinted. The plastic degrading abilities of Bacillus siamensis ATKU1 suggest its probable application for large scale plastic bioremediation facility.

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