Department of Biology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, United States of America.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Jan 10;907:167972. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167972. Epub 2023 Oct 20.
Plastics in agricultural soils pose a potential risk to humans because environmental plastics can enter our foods. Here, we present a first step toward developing bacteria that can both flourish in agricultural settings and bioremediate nanoplastics. We exposed two species known to promote plant growth in agricultural settings, Bacillus inaquosorum and B. velezensis, to polystyrene nanoplastic beads at various dosages. When grown in a medium with a low dosage of plastic as the only carbon source, the bacteria could oxidize the plastic, indicating the possibility of utilizing the plastic in their growth. When plastic was added to a rich medium, low and high dosages brought immediate death or inhibition to about a third of B. inaquosorum cells during 1 h. Despite the immediate harm, over the course of 24 h, the bacteria from one strain each of B. inaquosorum and B. velezensis reached higher densities at low plastic doses than with no plastic, although they reached lower densities at high plastic doses (a toxicological phenomenon known as hormesis). Microscopic studies demonstrated that the bacteria are shielded from excessive accumulation of nanoplastic particles. Because these plant-growth-promoting species can utilize polystyrene nanoplastics, strains of these species might be developed to bioremediate environmental plastic in agricultural settings. SYNOPSIS: Plastic fragments on farmlands accumulate on produce, creating a need for bioremediation. We identify bacteria that can flourish on agricultural land and utilize nanoplastics, a first step toward developing agricultural bioremediators.
农田中的塑料碎片会在农产品上聚集,因此需要进行生物修复。我们发现了一些可以在农业土地上茁壮成长并利用纳米塑料的细菌,这是开发农业生物修复剂的第一步。