Qi_2023_Environ.Microbiol_25_2822

Reference

Title : Glacier as a source of novel polyethylene terephthalate hydrolases - Qi_2023_Environ.Microbiol_25_2822
Author(s) : Qi X , Ji M , Yin CF , Zhou NY , Liu Y
Ref : Environ Microbiol , 25 :2822 , 2023
Abstract :

Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a major component of microplastic contamination globally, which is now detected in pristine environments including Polar and mountain glaciers. As a carbon-rich molecule, PET could be a carbon source for microorganisms dwelling in glacier habitats. Thus, glacial microorganisms may be potential PET degraders with novel PET hydrolases. Here, we obtained 414 putative PET hydrolase sequences by searching a global glacier metagenome dataset. Metagenomes from the Alps and Tibetan glaciers exhibited a higher relative abundance of putative PET hydrolases than those from the Arctic and Antarctic. Twelve putative PET hydrolase sequences were cloned and expressed, with one sequence (designated as GlacPETase) proven to degrade amorphous PET film with a similar performance as IsPETase, but with a higher thermostability. GlacPETase exhibited only 30% sequence identity to known active PET hydrolases with a novel disulphide bridge location and, therefore may represent a novel PET hydrolases class. The present work suggests that extreme carbon-poor environments may harbour a diverse range of known and novel PET hydrolases for carbon acquisition as an environmental adaptation mechanism.

PubMedSearch : Qi_2023_Environ.Microbiol_25_2822
PubMedID: 37775503
Gene_locus related to this paper: psesp-GlacPETase

Related information

Gene_locus psesp-GlacPETase

Citations formats

Qi X, Ji M, Yin CF, Zhou NY, Liu Y (2023)
Glacier as a source of novel polyethylene terephthalate hydrolases
Environ Microbiol 25 :2822

Qi X, Ji M, Yin CF, Zhou NY, Liu Y (2023)
Environ Microbiol 25 :2822