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Título

Putative degraders of low-density polyethylene-derived compounds are ubiquitous members of plastic associated bacterial communities in the marine environment

AutorPinto, María; Polania Zenner, Paula; Langer, T.M.; Harrison, Jesse; Simon, Meinhard; Varela, Marta María; Herndl, G.J.
Palabras claveCentro Oceanográfico de A Coruña
Plastic debris affecting oceans
Medio Marino
Marine microbial communities
LDPE enrichment experiments
Ocean pollution
North atlantic ocean
Pacific Ocean
Northern Adriatic Sea
Fecha de publicación15-sep-2020
CitaciónEnvironmental Microbiology, 22 (11). 2020: 4779-4793
ResumenIt remains unknown whether and to what extent marine prokaryotic communities are capable of degrading plastic in the ocean. To address this knowledge gap, we combined enrichment experiments employing low-density polyethylene (LDPE) as the sole carbon source with a comparison of bacterial communities on plastic debris in the Pacific, the North Atlantic and the northern Adriatic Sea. A total of 35 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were enriched in the LDPE-laboratory incubations after 1 year, of which 20 were present with relative abundances > 0.5% in at least one plastic sample collected from the environment. From these, OTUs classified as Cognatiyoonia, Psychrobacter, Roseovarius and Roseobacter were found in the communities of plastics collected at all oceanic sites. Additionally, OTUs classified as Roseobacter, Pseudophaeobacter, Phaeobacter, Marinovum and Cognatiyoonia, also enriched in the LDPE-laboratory incubations, were enriched on LDPE communities compared to the ones associated to glass and polypropylene in in-situ incubations in the northern Adriatic Sea after 1 month of incubation. Some of these enriched OTUs were also related to known alkane and hydrocarbon degraders. Collectively, these results demonstrate that there are prokaryotes capable of surviving with LDPE as the sole carbon source living on plastics in relatively high abundances in different water masses of the global ocean.
DescripciónResearch article
Versión del editorhttps://sfamjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1462-2920.15232
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/316272
DOI10.1111/1462-2920.15232
ISSN1462-2912
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