微塑料
静水压力
生物降解
流体静力平衡
孔隙水压力
地质学
环境科学
岩土工程
海洋学
生物
生态学
机械
量子力学
物理
作者
Kehong Yu,Beibei Chai,Tianyu Zhuo,Qingfeng Tang,Xia Gao,Jiamin Wang,Lixin He,Xiaohui Lei,Bin Chen
出处
期刊:Water Research
[Elsevier]
日期:2023-06-11
卷期号:242: 120185-120185
被引量:14
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2023.120185
摘要
Microplastics originate from the physical, chemical, or biological degradation of plastics in the environment. Once ingested by organisms at the bottom of the food chain, microplastics are passed on to organisms at higher trophic levels, posing a threat to human health. The distribution of microplastics and the metabolic pathways involved in their microbial degradation in surface sediments of drinking water reservoirs are still poorly understood. This study analyzed the occurrence patterns of microplastics and microbial community structure associated with microplastic biodegradation in surface sediments from a deep reservoir at various hydrostatic pressures. Based on the results of Fourier-transform and laser direct infrared spectroscopy, elevating the pressure resulted in altered sizes and shapes of microplastics in sediment samples with the presence of microorganisms. The influence of hydrostatic pressure on small-sized microplastics (20–500 μm) was pronounced. For instance, high pressure accelerated the breakdown of fibers, pellets, and fragments into smaller-sized microplastics. In particular, the mean size of polyethylene terephthalate microplastics decreased from 425.78 μm at atmospheric pressure to 366.62 μm at 0.7 Mpa. Metagenomic analysis revealed an increase in the relative abundances of plastic-degrading genera, such as Rhodococcus, Flavobacterium, and Aspergillus, in response to elevated pressures. Eight functional genes for biodegradation of polystyrene, polyethylene, and polyethylene terephthalate microplastics were annotated, including paaK, ladA, tphA3. Of these, tphA3 gene abundance was negatively influenced by hydrostatic pressure, providing direct evidence for the pathway by which microbial metabolism of polyethylene terephthalate led to decreased microplastic size under high pressure conditions. This study presents novel insights into hydrostatic pressure-driven microbial community structure, functional gene abundance, and key metabolic pathways associated with biodegradation of microplastics in reservoir sediments.
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