4.8 Article

Exploring the Composition and Functions of Plastic Microbiome Using Whole-Genome Sequencing

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 8, Pages 4899-4913

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c07952

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Commonwealth of Australia
  2. University of Newcastle, Australia, through the Australian Government Research training Program (RTP) Scholarship

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This study investigates the interaction between different types of plastics and marine biofilm-forming microorganisms using whole-genome sequencing, revealing unique microbial profiles on microplastic surfaces that may pose potential risks to the marine food chain and aquaculture industries. Additionally, the plastic-microbiome is involved in diverse processes such as xenobiotic compound degradation and carbon cycling.
Besides the ecotoxicological consequences of microplastics and associated chemicals, the association of microbes on plastics has greater environmental implications as microplastics may select for unique microbiome participating in environmentally significant functions. Despite this, the functional potential of the microbiome associated with different types of plastics is understudied. Here, we investigate the interaction between plastic and marine biofilm-forming microorganisms through a whole-genome sequencing approach on four types of microplastics incubated in the marine environment. Taxonomic analysis suggested that the microplastic surfaces exhibit unique microbial profiles and niche partitioning among the substrates. In particular, the abundance of Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio campbellii suggested that microplastic pollution may pose a potential risk to the marine food chain and negatively impact aquaculture industries. Microbial genera involved in xenobiotic compound degradation, carbon cycling, and genes associated with the type IV secretion system, conjugal transfer protein TraG, plant-pathogen interaction, CusA/CzcA family heavy metal efflux transfer proteins, and TolC family proteins were significantly enriched on all the substrates, indicating the variety of processes operated by the plastic-microbiome. The present study gives a detailed characterization of the rapidly altering microbial composition and gene pools on plastics and adds new knowledge surrounding the environmental ramifications of marine plastic pollution.

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