Biodegradation of Polyester Polyurethane by Endophytic Fungi

Jonathan R. Russell(Yale University), Jeffrey Huang(Yale University), Pria Anand(Yale University), Kaury Kucera(Yale University), Amanda G. Sandoval Karamian(Yale University), Kathleen D. Press(Yale University), DaShawn A. Hickman(Yale University), Justin Jee(Yale University), Farrah M. Kimovec(Yale University), David Koppstein(Yale University), Daniel H. Marks(Yale University), Paul A. Mittermiller(Yale University), Salvador Joel Núñez(Yale University), Marina Santiago(Yale University), Maria A. Townes(Yale University), Michael Vishnevetsky(Yale University), Neely E. Williams(Yale University), Mario Percy Núñez Vargas(National University of Saint Anthony the Abbot in Cuzco), L. W. Boulanger(Yale University), Carol Bascom‐Slack(Yale University), Scott A. Strobel(Yale University)
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
July 16, 2011
Cited by 535Open Access
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Abstract

Bioremediation is an important approach to waste reduction that relies on biological processes to break down a variety of pollutants. This is made possible by the vast metabolic diversity of the microbial world. To explore this diversity for the breakdown of plastic, we screened several dozen endophytic fungi for their ability to degrade the synthetic polymer polyester polyurethane (PUR). Several organisms demonstrated the ability to efficiently degrade PUR in both solid and liquid suspensions. Particularly robust activity was observed among several isolates in the genus Pestalotiopsis, although it was not a universal feature of this genus. Two Pestalotiopsis microspora isolates were uniquely able to grow on PUR as the sole carbon source under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Molecular characterization of this activity suggests that a serine hydrolase is responsible for degradation of PUR. The broad distribution of activity observed and the unprecedented case of anaerobic growth using PUR as the sole carbon source suggest that endophytes are a promising source of biodiversity from which to screen for metabolic properties useful for bioremediation.


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