Polyethylene and polystyrene oxidation by host and microbial oxidoreductases in Zophobas atratus.
Son JS, Chang GD, Jang S, Lee S, Sim Y
Plastic Degradation
Plastic mulch films and polytunnel fragments quietly fragmenting into microplastics across your garden beds may one day be targeted by bioengineered versions of these insect-derived enzymes, giving soil microbiomes new tools to break down the plastic debris accumulating in cultivated soil worldwide.
Superworms — the large grubs sold as reptile food — can actually eat through common plastics, and researchers have now cracked open the mystery of how. It turns out the worms use a one-two punch: their own bodies produce an enzyme that attacks one type of plastic, while a specific gut bacterium handles both types. This dual system makes them far more effective plastic degraders than other insects previously studied.
Key Findings
Zophobas atratus larvae showed significantly higher ingestion and oxidation of both polyethylene and polystyrene compared to wax moth larvae (Galleria mellonella)
Antibiotic treatment substantially reduced plastic oxidation but did not eliminate it, proving that both the host insect and its gut microbes each contribute independently to plastic breakdown
A host enzyme (CYP6k1-ZP10) was confirmed to oxidize polyethylene via RNA interference, while the gut bacterium Klebsiella variicola and its FMN-dependent monooxygenase were identified as responsible for oxidizing both plastics
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists discovered that superworms (Zophobas atratus) break down common plastics using both their own body enzymes and gut bacteria. A host enzyme called CYP6k1-ZP10 attacks polyethylene, while a gut microbe, Klebsiella variicola, uses its own enzyme to oxidize both polyethylene and polystyrene.
Abstract Preview
Insect-mediated oxidation is a promising strategy for degrading hydrocarbon-based plastics. There is evidence for better long-term ingestion and sustained intestinal oxidation of polyethylene (PE) ...
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