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- Modified bacteria convert plastic waste into pain reliever
Dealing with plastic waste is a real headache But with a little help, bacteria can turn plastic into a painkiller Genetically engineered Escherichia coli bacteria converted a broken-down plastic
- E. coli can turn plastic into painkillers, chemists discover
Scientists have found a way to use the bacteria E coli to convert plastic waste into a popular painkiller, a study said Monday, though outside experts doubted the technique would make a dent in
- Waste to painkiller? Bacteria convert plastic into paracetamol
Move over crude oil, scientists have found a way to turn plastic waste into paracetamol, also known as acetaminophen, using a common bacterium The breakthrough, developed by researchers at the
- Plastic-eating bacteria turn waste into useful starting . . .
Mountains of used plastic bottles get thrown away every day, but microbes could potentially tackle this problem Now, researchers in ACS Central Science report that they’ve developed a plastic-eating E coli that can efficiently turn polyethylene terephthalate (PET) waste into adipic acid, which
- Eyeing greener future, researchers turn bacteria, plastic . . .
Turn it into a useful product That's the upshot of a study published Monday in Nature Chemistry In the study, a team of researchers say they've found a chemical reaction that can extract medicine from plastic waste with the help of Escherichia coli bacteria, better known as E coli
- Designer Microbes Make Painkillers from Plastic Waste
He has created bacterial factories that pump out nylon precursors using paper waste and vanilla flavor compounds from discarded plastic 1,2 Now, Wallace and his team have designed bacteria that convert plastic waste into the widely used analgesic paracetamol 3 Published in Nature Chemistry, the technique has a negligible carbon footprint and
- Scientists use bacteria to convert plastic into paracetamol
Scientists use bacteria to convert plastic into paracetamol For the first time, a scientific study has succeeded in using live microbes to produce medicine — by digesting and fermenting waste Stephen Wallace, author of the research, in his Chemical Biotechnology laboratory at the University of Edinburgh
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