The smallest solution to one of our biggest problems - Tierney Thys & Christian Sardet

473,060 views

2022-07-07 ・ TED-Ed


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The smallest solution to one of our biggest problems - Tierney Thys & Christian Sardet

473,060 views ・ 2022-07-07

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:11
At this very moment, almost everything around you is being eaten.
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Invisible to the naked eye, organisms called microbes swarm every surface.
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Hordes of bacteria, archaea, and fungi have evolved to produce powerful enzymes
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that break down tough organic material into digestible nutrients.
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But there’s one particularly widespread type of material
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that almost no microbes can biodegrade:
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plastics.
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To make most plastics, molecules from oil, gas and coal are refined
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and turned into long, repeating chains called polymers.
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This process often requires temperatures above 100˚C, incredibly high pressure,
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and various chemical modifications.
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The resulting man-made polymers are quite different
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from the polymers found in nature.
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And since they’ve only been around since the 1950s,
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most microbes haven’t had time to evolve enzymes to digest them.
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Making matters even more difficult,
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breaking most plastics’ chemical bonds requires high temperatures
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comparable to those used to create them—
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and such heat is deadly to most microbes.
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This means that most plastics never biologically degrade—
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they just turn into countless, tiny, indigestible pieces.
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And pieces from the most common plastics like Polyethylene, Polypropylene,
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and Polyester-terephthalate have been piling up for decades.
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Each year humanity produces roughly 400 million more tons of plastic,
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80% of which is discarded as trash.
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Of that plastic waste, only 10% is recycled.
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60% gets incinerated or goes into the landfills,
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and 30% leaks out into the environment
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where it will pollute natural ecosystems for centuries.
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An estimated 10 million tons of plastic waste end up in the ocean each year,
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mostly in the form of microplastic fragments that pollute the food chain.
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Fortunately, there are microbes that may be able
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to take a bite out of this growing problem.
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In 2016, a team of Japanese researchers sampling sludge
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at a plastic-bottle recycling plant discovered
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Ideonella sakaiensis 201-F6.
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This never-before-identified bacterium contained two enzymes
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capable of slowly breaking down PET polymers
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at relatively low temperatures.
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Researchers isolated the genes coding for these plastic-digesting enzymes,
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allowing other bioengineers to combine and improve the pair—
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creating super-enzymes that could break down PET up to 6 times faster.
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Even with this boost,
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these lab-grown enzymes still took weeks to degrade a thin film of PET,
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and they operated best at temperatures below 40˚C.
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However, another group of scientists in Japan had been researching
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bacterial enzymes adapted to high temperature environments
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like compost piles.
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And within one particularly warm pile of rotting leaves and branches,
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they found gene sequences for powerful degrading enzymes
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known as Leaf Branch Compost Cutinases.
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Using fast-growing microorganisms,
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other researchers were able to genetically engineer
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high quantities of these enzymes.
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They then enhanced and selected special variants of the Cutinases
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that could degrade PET plastic in environments reaching 70˚C—
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a high temperature that can weaken PET polymers and make them digestible.
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With the help of these and other tiny diehards,
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the future of PET recycling looks promising.
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But PET is just one type of plastic.
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We still need ways to biologically degrade all the other types,
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including abundant PEs and PPs
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which only begin breaking down at temperatures well above 130˚C.
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Researchers don’t currently know of any microbes or enzymes
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tough enough to tolerate such temperatures.
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So for now, the main way we deal with these plastics
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is through energy-intensive physical and chemical processes.
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Today only a small fraction of plasticwaste
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can be biologically degraded by microbes.
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Researchers are looking for more heat-tolerant plastivores
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in the planet’s most hostile environments
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and engineering better plastivorous enzymes in the lab.
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But we can’t rely solely on these tiny helpers to clean up our enormous mess.
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We need to completely rethink our relationship with plastics,
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make better use of existing plastics,
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and stopproducing more of the same.
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And we urgently need to design more environmentally friendly types of polymers
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that our growing entourage of plastivores can easily break down.
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