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Efficient polyethylene terephthalate degradation at moderate temperature

International Journal of Sustainable Development Research 2023
Valentina Pirillo, Marco Orlando, Caren Battaglia, Loredano Pollegioni, Gianluca Molla

Summary

Researchers engineered improved variants of leaf-branch compost cutinase (LCC) to more efficiently depolymerize PET plastic at moderate temperatures, finding that the S101N/F243T double variant could fully break down 1.3 g of postconsumer PET waste within three days at 55°C. The study also revealed that high temperatures above 70°C are counterproductive because they convert amorphous PET into a more crystalline, enzyme-resistant form.

Polymers

Enzymatic degradation of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) is becoming a reality because of the identification of novel PET‐hydrolysing enzymes (PHEs) and the engineering of evolved enzyme variants. Here, improved variants of leaf‐branch compost cutinase (LCC), a thermostable enzyme isolated by a metagenomic approach, were generated by a semi‐rational protein engineering approach. Starting from a deleted LCC form lacking the secretion signal (ΔLCC), single and double variants possessing a higher activity on PET were isolated. The single‐point F243T ΔLCC variant partially (~ 67%) depolymerized amorphous PET film producing ~ 21.9 m m of products after 27 h of reaction at 72 °C. The S101N/F243T ΔLCC double variant reached a further increase in activity on PET. Notably, for both single and double variants the highest conversion yield was obtained at 55 °C. Kinetics studies and molecular dynamics simulations support that a slight decreased affinity for PET is responsible for the superior degradation performance of the S101N/F243T variant and that this stems from a slightly higher flexibility of the active site region close to position 243. Furthermore, our findings question the need for a high reaction temperature for PET degradation, at least for LCC: at ≥ 70 °C, the conversion of amorphous PET into a more crystalline polymer, resistant to enzymatic hydrolysis, is favoured. The evolved S101N/F243T ΔLCC variant is able to depolymerize fully 1.3 g of untreated postconsumer PET waste in ≤ 3 days at 55 °C (using 1.25 mg of enzyme only), this making PET enzymatic degradation by engineering LCC a more ecofriendly and sustainable process.

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