Plastic pollution poses a growing environmental threat, particularly as micro- and nanoplastic particles accumulate across marine, freshwater, terrestrial and even polar ecosystems. Although hundreds of plastic-degrading enzymes have been described in individual microbial species, the global distribution and evolutionary conservation of these proteins have remained unclear.
“Our results show that the potential for plastic biodegradation is not limited to a few specialized microbes – on the contrary, it is nearly universal. This suggests that microbial communities worldwide may already possess the molecular toolkit needed to respond to plastic pollution,” said Dr Pere Puigbò from the University of Turku and Autonomous University of Barcelona, co‑senior author of the study.
Environmental adaptation shapes the microbes’ capacity for degrading plastics #
The PDCOGs classify plastic‑degrading proteins associated with 11 natural and 28 synthetic polymers. The global distribution of these polymers across 23 environments—from deep‑sea sediments and soils to hot springs and polar regions—reveals that biodegradation potential is strongly influenced by local ecological conditions. Some habitats, such as soils and endolithic ecosystems, are particularly enriched in plastic‑degrading enzymes, suggesting local adaptation or ecological selection.
From a materials and applications perspective, these findings highlight how environmentally-driven microbial adaptation can inspire new technological approaches. By revealing which enzymes thrive in specific habitats and under particular ecological pressures, the PDCOGs provide a roadmap for developing materials and biotechnological solutions that are optimized for local environmental conditions.
Citation #
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The study Plastic-degrading clusters of orthologous groups reveal near-universal biodegradation potential in prokaryotes was published in the Environmental Technology &Innovation, from ScienceDirect group. Authors: Shakira Mustari, Loan Tú Phạm, Kari Saikkonen, Miho Nakamura, Pere Puigbò.
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The article Study: Microbes show almost universal potential for biodegrading plastics was published in the news section from University of Turku, of Finland.
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