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Biodegradation of Petrochemical Plastics by Microorganisms: Toward Sustainable Solutions for Plastic Pollution

Current Research in Nutrition and Food Science Journal 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Luis Getino, José Antonio Revilla-Gómez, Luisa María Ariza-Carmona, Sofie Thijs, Claude Didierjean, Alejandro Chamizo‐Ampudia

Summary

This review comprehensively examined microbial biodegradation of major petrochemical plastics including polyethylene, polypropylene, PET, and PVC by bacteria, fungi, and actinomycetes, highlighting key degrading strains, enzymatic mechanisms, and advances in protein engineering and synthetic biology for enhanced efficiency. While scaling biodegradation to environmental conditions remains challenging due to variable temperature, pH, microbial competition, and potentially toxic intermediates, the review argued that microbial approaches represent promising eco-friendly pathways toward a biobased circular economy for plastic waste.

Plastic pollution has emerged as a critical environmental challenge due to the widespread accumulation of petrochemical plastics in natural ecosystems. Conventional waste management strategies, including mechanical recycling and incineration, have demonstrated limited efficiency in addressing the persistence of plastics such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, and polyvinyl chloride. While incineration eliminates plastic material, it does not promote circularity and may generate toxic emissions. As a sustainable alternative, microbial biodegradation involves bacteria, fungi, and actinomycetes capable of degrading synthetic polymers through enzymatic processes. This review provides a comprehensive overview of microbial degradation of major plastics such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, and polyvinyl chloride, highlighting key strains, degradation rates, and enzymatic mechanisms. Importantly, biodegradation research also informs the development of in situ remediation technologies and supports new recycling strategies. Advances in protein engineering and synthetic biology are discussed for enhancing degradation efficiency. However, scaling biodegradation to environmental conditions remains challenging due to variable temperature, pH, microbial competition, and potentially toxic intermediates. Despite these limitations, microbial biodegradation represents a promising ecofriendly approach to address plastic waste and promote a biobased circular economy. Future work should integrate microbial processes into existing recycling infrastructure and design robust consortia guided by omics tools.

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