4.6 Article

Polystyrene Degradation by Exiguobacterium sp. RIT 594: Preliminary Evidence for a Pathway Containing an Atypical Oxygenase

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10081619

Keywords

Exiguobacterium; polystyrene; biodegradation; biotransformation; oxygenase; microbial metabolism; plastic degradation

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The widespread use of plastics has led to their increasing presence in the environment and subsequent pollution. Some microorganisms can degrade plastics and studying their metabolic pathways can help understand the degradation mechanisms. This study reveals the enzymatic degradation mechanism of polystyrene by Exiguobacterium sp. RIT 594 and confirms the importance of oxygen in the degradation process.
The widespread use of plastics has led to their increasing presence in the environment and subsequent pollution. Some microorganisms degrade plastics in natural ecosystems and the associated metabolic pathways can be studied to understand the degradation mechanisms. Polystyrene (PS) is one of the more recalcitrant plastic polymers that is degraded by only a few bacteria. Exiguobacterium is a genus of Gram-positive poly-extremophilic bacteria known to degrade PS, thus being of biotechnological interest, but its biochemical mechanisms of degradation have not yet been elucidated. Based solely on genome annotation, we initially proposed PS degradation by Exiguobacterium sp. RIT 594 via depolymerization and epoxidation catalyzed by a ring epoxidase. However, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy analysis revealed an increase of carboxyl and hydroxyl groups with biodegradation, as well as of unconjugated C-C double bonds, both consistent with dearomatization of the styrene ring. This excludes any aerobic pathways involving side chain epoxidation and/or hydroxylation. Subsequent experiments confirmed that molecular oxygen is critical to PS degradation by RIT 594 because degradation ceased under oxygen-deprived conditions. Our studies suggest that styrene breakdown by this bacterium occurs via the sequential action of two enzymes encoded in the genome: an orphan aromatic ring-cleaving dioxygenase and a hydrolase.

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