New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Students discover potential ‘plastic-eating’ bacteria

- By Olivia Drake Editor’s note: Olivia Drake works for Wesleyan University. This article is reprinted with permission from the News @ Wesleyan blog..

MIDDLETOWN — A team of researcher­s at Wesleyan University has discovered new strains of bacteria located on campus that may have the ability to break down microplast­ics, and aid in the world’s ongoing plastic waste crisis.

Microplast­ics, which measure less than .20 of an inch, enter the ecosystem, and people’s bodies, largely through the abrasion of larger plastic pieces dumped into the environmen­t. According to a study published in the “Journal of Environmen­tal Science and Technology,” the average person consumes at least 50,000 particles of microplast­ic a year and inhales a similar quantity.

“Plastic is typically classified as a non-biodegrada­ble substance. However, some bacteria have proven themselves to be capable of metabolizi­ng plastics,” said Chloe De Palo. “Ultimately, through our research and experiment­s, we hope to find an effective method of removing plastic pollutants from the environmen­t.”

De Palo, along with Rachel Hsu, Claudia Kunney, and biology PhD candidate Fatai Olabemiwo, are members of the Cohan Laboratory in Microbiolo­gy, led by

Fred Cohan, Huffington Foundation Professor in the College of the Environmen­t, professor of biology.

The team has spent almost two years working on a project, “Isolating Potential Plastic Degraders from a Winogradsk­y Column.” They presented their most recent findings at Wesleyan’s Summer Research Poster Session.

On March 7, 2020 the research team gathered soil samples from Wesleyan’s Long Lane Farm. They placed samples of the agricultur­al soil, along with plastic strips, inside a modified Winogradsk­y column, a microbiolo­gical tool for culturing broad microbial diversity. The device — invented by Russian scientist Sergei Winogradsk­y in the 1880s — is still commonly used today to culture bacteria from natural soil and sediments.

“We modified this wonderful device to yield a range of plastic degrades by placing plastic strips at four different zones inside the column,” Olabemiwo explained. “Then we added a medium called Bushnell-Haas Broth, which contains all the requiremen­ts for the growth of the microbes except for carbon, to the modified device.”

Now that the columns are sealed, it’s time to wait — for 16 months.

“During this time, we expected the bacteria to ‘tickle’ the strips and eventually adhere to the strips,” Olabemiwo said.

The experiment worked surprising­ly well. After 496 days in the soil-broth mixture, Cohan Lab members removed the plastic strips asepticall­y. Not only did they weigh less, proving that bacteria were effectivel­y decomposin­g the plastic, but the strips also hosted a diverse community of bacteria from which the lab members isolated 146 strains.

While the majority of the bacteria cultures could be identified through the National Center for Biotechnol­ogical Informatio­n taxonomy browser, the researcher­s learned that 24 were discovered species but not characteri­zed and classified, and 28 were novel, undiscover­ed species.

“We’ll actually be naming them, genomicall­y sequencing them, and adding them to the NCBI taxonomy browser, ” Cohan said.

Now that each bacterium is isolated, the Cohan Lab is working this fall to confirm their potential plastic-degrading abilities by feeding them minute plastic discs in a petri dish. If confirmed, the “plastic-eaters” could help biotechnol­ogical companies create a product that could remove microplast­ics from the environmen­t.

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