AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates how different biodegradable polymers, like PCL and PHBH, break down in marine environments, focusing on the associated microbiomes and their degradation processes.
  • - Researchers collected a massive amount of microbiome and metabolome samples to understand how microbial communities change during the degradation of these polymers, revealing that specific polymer types attract distinct microbial populations.
  • - The timeline of microbial changes included an initial drop in some microbes, a rise in polymer degraders, and a gradual increase in biofilm-building microbes, with specific genes playing a key role in the degradation process.

Article Abstract

While biodegradable polymers have received increased attention due to the recent marine plastic problem, few studies have compared microbiomes and their degradation processes among biodegradable polymers. In this study, we set up prompt evaluation systems for polymer degradation, allowing us to collect 418 microbiome and 125 metabolome samples to clarify the microbiome and metabolome differences according to degradation progress and polymer material (polycaprolactone [PCL], polybutylene succinate-co-adipate [PBSA], polybutylene succinate [PBS], polybutylene adipate-co-terephthalate [PBAT], and poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyhexanoate) [PHBH]). The microbial community compositions were converged to each polymer material, and the largest differences were observed between PHBH and other polymers. Such gaps were probably formed primarily by the presence of specific hydrolase genes (i.e., 3HB depolymerase, lipase, and cutinase) in the microorganisms. Time-series sampling suggested several steps for microbial succession: (1) initial microbes decrease abruptly after incubation starts; (2) microbes, including polymer degraders, increase soon after the start of incubation and show an intermediate peak; (3) microbes, including biofilm constructers, increase their abundance gradually. Metagenome prediction showed functional changes, where free-swimming microbes with flagella adhered stochastically onto the polymer, and certain microbes started to construct a biofilm. Our large-dataset-based results provide robust interpretations for biodegradable polymer degradation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10317964PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43705-023-00275-zDOI Listing

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