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Synergistic Enzyme Mixtures to Realize Near-Complete Depolymerization in Biodegradable Polymer/Additive Blends

2021 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Christopher DelRe, Boyce S. Chang, Ivan Jayapurna, Aaron Hall, Ariel Wang, Kyle Zolkin, Ting Xu

Summary

Researchers showed that embedding enzyme mixtures inside biodegradable polymer blends can achieve near-complete polymer degradation by exploiting different degradation pathways in crystalline versus amorphous regions. This embedded catalyst approach could help solve the problem of incomplete biodegradation that leaves microplastic residues from supposedly biodegradable products.

Abstract Embedding catalysts inside of plastics affords accelerated chemical modification with programmable latency and pathways. Nanoscopically embedded enzymes can lead to near complete degradation of polyesters via chain-end mediated processive depolymerization. The overall degradation rate and pathways have a strong dependence on the morphology of semi-crystalline polyesters. Yet, most studies to date focus on pristine polymers instead of mixtures with additives and other components despite their nearly universal uses in plastic production. Here, additives are introduced to purposely change the morphology of polycaprolactone (PCL) by increasing the bending and twisting of crystalline lamellae. These morphological changes immobilize chain-ends preferentially at the crystalline/amorphous interfaces and limit chain-end accessibility by the embedded processive enzyme. This chain end redistribution reduces the polymer-to-monomer conversion from >95% to less than 50%, causing formation of highly crystalline plastic pieces including microplastics. By synergizing both random chain scission and processive depolymerization, it is feasible to navigate morphological changes in polymer/additive blends and to achieve near complete depolymerization. The random scission enzymes in the amorphous domains create new chain ends that are subsequently bound and depolymerized by processive enzymes. Present studies further highlight the importance to consider host polymer morphological effects on the reactions catalyzed by embedded catalytic species.

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