International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2024)

Biodegradation of Polystyrene by <i>Galleria mellonella</i>: Identification of Potential Enzymes Involved in the Degradative Pathway

  • Sebastián Venegas,
  • Carolina Alarcón,
  • Juan Araya,
  • Marcell Gatica,
  • Violeta Morin,
  • Estefanía Tarifeño-Saldivia,
  • Elena Uribe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25031576
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
p. 1576

Abstract

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Galleria mellonella is a lepidopteran whose larval stage has shown the ability to degrade polystyrene (PS), one of the most recalcitrant plastics to biodegradation. In the present study, we fed G. mellonella larvae with PS for 54 days and determined candidate enzymes for its degradation. We first confirmed the biodegradation of PS by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy- Attenuated total reflectance (FTIR-ATR) and then identified candidate enzymes in the larval gut by proteomic analysis using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Two of these proteins have structural similarities to the styrene-degrading enzymes described so far. In addition, potential hydrolases, isomerases, dehydrogenases, and oxidases were identified that show little similarity to the bacterial enzymes that degrade styrene. However, their response to a diet based solely on polystyrene makes them interesting candidates as a potential new group of polystyrene-metabolizing enzymes in eukaryotes.

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