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An engineered biosensor for the fast and accurate detection of terephthalate

Microplastics and Nanoplastics 2026
Marc Scherer, Philipp Wenger, Andreas Gagsteiger, Onur Turak, Birte Höcker

Summary

This study engineered TPAsense, a protein-based biosensor for fast and accurate detection of terephthalate, the degradation product of PET and PBT plastics. The sensor achieved nanomolar sensitivity, was validated against high-performance liquid chromatography data, and was demonstrated to detect PET microplastics in wastewater treatment plant samples when combined with a PETase enzyme.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Accelerating the development of enzymatic degradation of polyesters such as poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) and poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) requires a rapid and parallelizable detection method. We developed a protein-based biosensor for the fast and accurate quantification of the PET and PBT degradation product, terephthalate (TPA), which we named TPAsense. Engineering TPAsense required overcoming low thermal stability and aggregation of the initial construct by introducing stabilizing mutations without disrupting the binding affinity to TPA. The sensor performance was validated by screening for the PBT degrading activity of a Leaf-branch Compost Cutinase (LCC) mutant library and comparing with liquid chromatography data. TPAsense detects nanomolar concentrations of TPA enabling shorter incubation times for screening workflows. In addition, a comparative analysis of PETase and PBTase kinetics was performed with TPAsense. Finally, we demonstrated the detection of PET microplastic in samples from a wastewater treatment plant by combining the biosensor and a PETase. TPAsense offers a platform to accelerate PETase and PBTase development for plastic waste recycling and detection of microplastic in the environment.

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