| Literature DB >> 22126328 |
Hiroko K Kitamoto1, Yukiko Shinozaki, Xiao-Hong Cao, Tomotake Morita, Masaaki Konishi, Kanako Tago, Hideyuki Kajiwara, Motoo Koitabashi, Shigenobu Yoshida, Takashi Watanabe, Yuka Sameshima-Yamashita, Toshiaki Nakajima-Kambe, Seiya Tsushima.
Abstract
The use of biodegradable plastics can reduce the accumulation of environmentally persistent plastic wastes. The rate of degradation of biodegradable plastics depends on environmental conditions and is highly variable. Techniques for achieving more consistent degradation are needed. However, only a few microorganisms involved in the degradation process have been isolated so far from the environment. Here, we show that Pseudozyma spp. yeasts, which are common in the phyllosphere and are easily isolated from plant surfaces, displayed strong degradation activity on films made from poly-butylene succinate or poly-butylene succinate-co-adipate. Strains of P. antarctica isolated from leaves and husks of paddy rice displayed strong degradation activity on these films at 30°C. The type strain, P. antarctica JCM 10317, and Pseudozyma spp. strains from phyllosphere secreted a biodegradable plastic-degrading enzyme with a molecular mass of about 22 kDa. Reliable source of biodegradable plastic-degrading microorganisms are now in our hands.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22126328 PMCID: PMC3293741 DOI: 10.1186/2191-0855-1-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Biodegradable plastic-degrading yeasts on rice husks harvested from various areas
| JP | Cultivar | Origin | Yeast population | Strain | Phenotype | Species | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YM | PBSA | ||||||
| 6775 | Shinei | Hokkaido | 1 × 106 | 4 × 103 | GB-1 | Smooth | |
| 6918 | Akamai | Tohoku | 6 × 105 | 1 × 104 | GB-2 | Wrinkled | |
| 6497 | Akinishiki | Niigata | 2 × 105 | 5 × 104 | GB-3 | Wrinkled | |
| 2031191 | Tankei | Ibaraki | 3 × 106 | 5 × 105 | GB-4(0) | Wrinkled | |
| 2031192 | Tankei | Ibaraki | 6 × 106 | 4 × 106 | GB-4(1)S | Smooth | |
| 4 × 105 | GB-4(1)W | Wrinkled | |||||
| 10995 | Nourin18 | Kumamoto | 8 × 105 | 6 × 105 | GB-5S | Smooth | |
| 3 × 105 | GB-5W | Wrinkled | |||||
| 7239 | Kanan 2 | Taiwan | 4 × 103 | 4 × 103 | GB-6 | Smooth | |
| 5310 | Matsumae | Hokkaido | 8 × 104 | 8 × 104 | GB-7 | Wrinkled | |
| 7032 | Ouu 52 | Akita | 8 × 105 | 8 × 105 | GB-8 | Wrinkled | |
| 7412 | Chibanishiki | Chiba | 3 × 105 | 0 × 100 | not found | ||
| 11295 | Saikai 124 | Fukuoka | 1 × 106 | 4 × 104 | GB-10S | Smooth | |
| 4 × 103 | GB-10W | Wrinkled | |||||
| 8955 | Kantou 135 | Saitama | 2 × 106 | 1 × 106 | GB-11S | Smooth | |
| 4 × 104 | GB-11W | Wrinkled | |||||
All seeds were obtained from National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences (NIAS) Genebank at Tsukua, Japan
Seeds of JP nos. 2031191, 5310, 7032, 7412, 11295, and 8955 were harvested in 2000. Those of JP nos. 6775, 6918, 6497, 2031192, 10995, and 7239 were harvested in 2005.
Isolated and stocked Pseudozyma spp. strains used in this study
| Species | Strain number | Source |
|---|---|---|
| JCM10317 T | Lake sediment | |
| SS1 | Pak choi ( | |
| SS2 | Pak choi ( | |
| SS6 | Mizuna ( | |
| SS15 | Ooba ( |
JCM: Japan Collection of Microorganisms of the Riken Bio-resource Center, Wako, Japan
T: Type strain
Figure 1Degradation of PBSA mulch film in soil. Degradation of 2 × 2 cm squares of PBSA mulch film packed in soil at water contents of 50% (hatched bar) and 60% (open bar) and incubated at 25°C.
Figure 2Screening and evaluation of biodegradable plastic degrading yeast from phyllosphere. (A) Screening method and degradation of 2 × 2-cm squares of PBSA and PBS mulch film at 30°C by yeasts (NRL-A and NRL-B) isolated from two rice leaves. (B) Quantification of film degradation rates of PBSA film by strain NRL-A (open circle), NRL-B (open triangle), and degradation rates of PBS film by NRL-A (closed circle), NRL-B (closed triangle).
Figure 3PBSA and PBS film-degradation activity of various species of phyllosphere yeasts. (A) PBSA and PBS film-degradation activity of yeast strains isolated from the husks of rice cultivated in various areas. Degradation rate of films after cultivation for 2 days (closed bar), 3 days (open bar), and 5 days (hatched bar), and (B) PBSA (closed bar, at 2 days) and PBS film (open bar, at 5 days)-degradation activity of various species of Pseudozyma collected from the leaves of rice and vegetables. Values are expressed as the mean (SD) at n = 3.
Figure 4Degradation of PBSA emulsion by culture broths of yeast strains isolated from phyllosphere. Yeast strains were cultivated in FMM liquid medium with soybean oil or glycerol as a carbon source. After 3 days' cultivation, PBSA emulsion degradation activity was measured.
Purification of biodegradable plastic-degrading enzyme from P. antarctica JCM10317
| Source of fraction | Total protein | Total activity | Specific activity | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culture filtrate | 23.306 | 28.96 | 1.24 | 100.0 |
| Ammonium sulfate precipitation | 0.422 | 3.42 | 8.11 | 11.83 |
| Ion exchange chromatography | 0.014 | 2.73 | 198.35 | 9.44 |
| Gel filtration | 0.003 | 1.34 | 398.16 | 4.61 |
Figure 5SDS-PAGE of biodegradable plastic-degrading enzyme (PaE) from . (A) Purification of PaE. M Molecular mass standards; 1 Ammoniun sulfate precipitate; Fractions of 2 passed through the DEAE-Sepharose column; 3 eluated from SP-Sepharose column; 4 Gel filtration. SDS-PAGE was performed using 12% gel and detected by silver staining (B) Purified PaE and CALB-L. M Molecular mass standards; 1 purified PaE (0.25 μg); 2 CALB-L (25 μg). SDS-PAGE was performed using 14.1% gel and detected by CBB. The black arrow in the PaE lane shows the PaE isolated from the culture medium. The black arrow in the CALB-L lane indicates lipase B. The white arrows indicate impurities.
Figure 6Immunological identification of biodegradable plastic-degrading enzymes of phyllosphere yeasts. Yeasts from vegetables (A) and rice husks (B) were cultivated in FMM liquid medium with glycerol for 3 days. TCA-precipitated culture broth (100 μl) was separated by using SDS gel electrophoresis and analyzed by use of Western blotting with anti-PaE. M Molecular mass standards.