Flying toward a plastic-free world: Can Drosophila serve as a model organism to develop new strategies of plastic waste management?

The last century was dominated by the widespread use of plastics, both in terms of invention and increased usage. The environmental challenge we currently face is not just about reducing plastic usage but finding new ways to manage plastic waste. Recycling is growing but remains a small part of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-03, Vol.914, p.169942-169942, Article 169942
Hauptverfasser: Pignataro, Eugenia, Pini, Francesco, Barbanente, Alessandra, Arnesano, Fabio, Palazzo, Antonio, Marsano, René Massimiliano
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container_title The Science of the total environment
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creator Pignataro, Eugenia
Pini, Francesco
Barbanente, Alessandra
Arnesano, Fabio
Palazzo, Antonio
Marsano, René Massimiliano
description The last century was dominated by the widespread use of plastics, both in terms of invention and increased usage. The environmental challenge we currently face is not just about reducing plastic usage but finding new ways to manage plastic waste. Recycling is growing but remains a small part of the solution. There is increasing focus on studying organisms and processes that can break down plastics, offering a modern approach to addressing the environmental crisis. Here, we provide an overview of the organisms associated with plastics biodegradation, and we explore the potential of harnessing and integrating their genetic and biochemical features into a single organism, such as Drosophila melanogaster. The remarkable genetic engineering and microbiota manipulation tools available for this organism suggest that multiple features could be amalgamated and modeled in the fruit fly. We outline feasible genetic engineering and gut microbiome engraftment strategies to develop a new class of plastic-degrading organisms and discuss of both the potential benefits and the limitations of developing such engineered Drosophila melanogaster strains. [Display omitted] •Current plastic waste management protocols can be implemented with complementary strategies.•Insects are increasingly recognized as valuable agents in the battle against plastic pollution.•Genome and microbiome manipulation can be applied to generate new degrader insects.•Model organisms with no plastic-degrading capacity can be turned into degraders.•Issues associated to the use of insects as plastic-degraders are discussed.
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Bioremediation
Drosophila melanogaster
Gut microbiota manipulation
Insect synthetic biology
Plastic waste management
Transgenic technologies
title Flying toward a plastic-free world: Can Drosophila serve as a model organism to develop new strategies of plastic waste management?
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