Discover how plastic-eating
bacteria were discovered and re-engineered to help tackle the worlds plastic
problem.
Plastic-eating bacteria could help to one
day tackle some of the 14 million tons of plastic that is offloaded into our
oceans every year. Plastic pollution leads to severe impact on marine
ecosystems and can affect human health. For example, once plastic enters the
ocean it can suffocate and entangle animals, according to the International
Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Microplastics are also ingested by many
marine species that are both preyed upon by other species and that we catch for
food. Once ingested, microplastics can leach the toxic contaminants that have
collected on their surface into the body of the organism that has consumed it,
according to the IUCN.
Those toxins can accumulate and
transfer up the food chain from marine life into humans, whenever we eat
something that has been taken from the sea. On land, the majority of plastic
ends up either building up in landfills or burnt into incinerators, which releases
toxic fumes. Just 16% of all plastic produced is recycled to make new plastic,
according to the BBC.
However, in 2016 Japanese
scientists made a remarkable discovery that could help tackle the world's
plastic problem, according to the journal Science. Scientists collected plastic
bottles outside a recycling facility, and discovered that a species of bacteria
was "eating" its way through them. Normally, bacteria spend their
time absorbing dead organic matter, but Ideonella sakaiensis has developed a
taste for a certain type of plastic called polyethylene terephthalate (PET).
After analyzing the bacteria, the
scientists found that it produced two digestive enzymes called hydrolyzing PET
or PETase. When these enzymes interact with PET plastic it breaks down the long
molecular chains into shorter chains (monomers) called terephthalic acid and
ethylene glycol. These monomers are then broken down further to release energy
for growth of the bacteria.
Following the discovery of plastic-eating
bacteria, many genetic scientists have experimented with Ideonella sakaiensis
to improve its efficiency. One such research venture has been to genetically
engineer bacteria that are more efficient at enzyme production, such as E.coli,
and turn them into PETase factories.
Although the discovery offers hope in the
fight against mounting plastic, scientists caution that we are still years away
from widespread commercial use. Similarly, PETase only decomposes PET plastic,
there are six other plastic types that we are still unable to degrade using
enzymes.
Researchers at the University of Portsmouth
have re-engineered PETase to create an enzyme "cocktail" that they
say can digest plastic up to six times faster than normal. The scientists
combine PETase with another plastic-eating enzyme called MHETase to form one
super enzyme, according to the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS).
The combined PETase-MHETase enzyme was
created with a synchrotron, a type of particle accelerator that uses x-rays 10
billion times brighter than the sun, according to the University of Portsmouth.
It enabled researchers to see the individual atoms of each enzyme and draw
their molecular blueprints.
Scientists then stitched their DNA together
to form a super enzyme. This enzyme can also break down Polyethylene furanoate
(PEF), a sugar-based bioplastic.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh
have been using E. coli bacteria to convert plastic into vanillin, the primary
component of vanilla bean extract. Considering that the global demand for vanillin
exceeded 40,000 tons (37,000 metric tonnes) in 2018 and 85% is made from
chemicals taken from fossil fuels, using plastic could be an eco-friendly
alternative situation, as Live Science has previously reported.
After degrading PET plastic into its basic
monomers, researchers took the process one step further and converted one of
those monomers, terephthalic acid, into vanillin through a series of chemical
reactions. The resulting vanillin is believed to be fit for human consumption,
though further investigation is needed.