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Acinetobacter bacteria could be potent degraders of fragmented polyethylene and polypropylene among the digestive tract bacteria of Galleria waxworms

Scientific Reports 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Takamasa Oota, S Ebina, Hodaka Shimoura, Maki Teramoto, Ying Huang K. Miyamoto, Maki Teramoto, Ying Huang

Summary

Scientists found bacteria called Acinetobacter in wax worms' guts that can break down tiny pieces of common plastics like polyethylene and polypropylene (found in shopping bags and food containers). These same bacteria also live naturally in some marine animals, suggesting they might help break down microplastics that contaminate our food chain. This discovery could lead to new ways to reduce plastic pollution that affects human health through contaminated seafood and drinking water.

Polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) dominate plastic production and are seriously contaminating environments. Bacteria in PE- and PP-ingesting worms, including Galleria, have thus attracted considerable attention owing to their PE and PP biodegradation potential and were investigated in this study. As PE and PP may be biodegraded after fragmented, the bacteria were enriched on n-hexadecane (a PE fragment) and on pristane (a branched alkane structurally similar to PP fragments) from the digestive tracts of Galleria waxworms. In these enriched cultures, Acinetobacter bacteria, particularly Acinetobacter courvalinii, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus, and Acinetobacter pittii, were detected most abundantly (A. calcoaceticus is closely related to A. pittii). Two alkane degraders probably of A. courvalinii and A. pittii were isolated from the cultures. They also degraded liquid PP (PP fragments), but not as a sole carbon source, and preferred different alkane chain lengths. On solid PE and PP, only initial signs of degradation (oxidation) were detected with each isolate. Surprisingly, the Acinetobacter bacteria were naturally abundant in the intestine of a ghostshark that contains much diacyl glyceryl ethers in its liver. These results indicate that Acinetobacter could be potent degraders of alkyl chains, including PE and PP fragments, among digestive tract bacteria of some terrestrial and marine organisms, including PE- and PP-ingesting worms.

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