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New Labeled PET Analogues Enable the Functional Screening and Characterization of PET-Degrading Enzymes

Advanced Sustainable Systems 2024 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
George Taxeidis, Milica Djapovic, Efstratios Nikolaivits, Veselin Maslak, Jasmina Nikodinović‐Runić, Evangelos Topakas

Summary

This research analyzed the spatial distribution of microplastic pollution in a large natural harbor, examining gradients from river inflows to open water. Highest concentrations were found near river mouths and in sheltered bays, while open harbor waters had lower but still detectable levels, reflecting dilution and mixing dynamics within the embayment.

Polymers

The discovery and engineering of novel biocatalysts capable of depolymerizing polyethylene terephthalate (PET) have gained significant attention since the need for green technologies to combat plastic pollution has become increasingly urgent. This study focuses on the development of novel substrates that can indicate enzymes with PET hydrolytic activity, streamlining the process of enzyme evaluation and selection. Four novel substrates, mimicking the structure of PET, were chemically synthesized and labeled with fluorogenic or chromogenic moieties, enabling the direct analysis of candidate enzymes without complex preparatory or analysis steps. The fluorogenic substrates, mUPET1, mUPET2, and mUPET3, not only identify enzymes capable of PET breakdown but also differentiate those with exceptional performance on the polymer, such as the benchmark PETase, LCCICCG. Among the substrates, the chromogenic p-NPhPET3 stands out as a reliable tool for screening both pure and crude enzymes, offering advantages over fluorogenic substrates such as ease of assay using UV-vis spectroscopy and compatibility with crude enzyme samples. However, ferulic acid esterases and mono-(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate esterases (MHETases), which exhibit remarkably high affinity for PET oligomers, also show high catalytic activity on these substrates. The substrates introduced in this study hold significant value in the function-based screening and characterization of enzymes that degrade PET, as well as the the potential to be used in screening mutant libraries derived from directed evolution experiments. Following this approach, a rapid and dependable assay method can be carried out using basic laboratory infrastructure, eliminating the necessity for intricate preparatory procedures before analysis.

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