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

Merging Plastics, Microbes, and Enzymes: Highlights from an International Workshop.

Applied and environmental microbiology 2022
Diego Javier Jiménez, Başak Öztürk, Ren Wei, Timothy D Bugg, Carol Viviana Amaya Gomez, Felipe Salcedo Galan, Jinneth Lorena Castro-Mayorga, Juan Fernando Saldarriaga, Natalia A. Tarazona

Summary

This article summarizes findings from an international workshop on plastic degradation by microorganisms and enzymes. Researchers discussed advances in identifying plastic-degrading microbes and enzymes and the potential to engineer biological systems to accelerate plastic breakdown. The workshop highlighted the promise of biotechnology as a tool for managing plastic pollution while identifying key gaps that remain to be addressed.

In the Anthropocene, plastic pollution is a worldwide concern that must be tackled from different viewpoints, bringing together different areas of science. Microbial transformation of polymers is a broad-spectrum research topic that has become a keystone in the circular economy of fossil-based and biobased plastics. To have an open discussion about these themes, experts in the synthesis of polymers and biodegradation of lignocellulose and plastics convened within the framework of The Transnational Network for Research and Innovation in Microbial Biodiversity, Enzymes Technology and Polymer Science (MENZYPOL-NET), which was recently created by early-stage scientists from Colombia and Germany. In this context, the international workshop "Microbial Synthesis and Degradation of Polymers: Toward a Sustainable Bioeconomy" was held on 27 September 2021 via Zoom. The workshop was divided into two sections, and questions were raised for discussion with panelists and expert guests. Several key points and relevant perspectives were delivered, mainly related to (i) the microbial evolution driven by plastic pollution; (ii) the relevance of and interplay between polymer structure/composition, enzymatic mechanisms, and assessment methods in plastic biodegradation; (iii) the recycling and valorization of plastic waste; (iv) engineered plastic-degrading enzymes; (v) the impact of (micro)plastics on environmental microbiomes; (vi) the isolation of plastic-degrading (PD) microbes and design of PD microbial consortia; and (vii) the synthesis and applications of biobased plastics. Finally, research priorities from these key points were identified within the microbial, enzyme, and polymer sciences.

Share this paper