| Literature DB >> 33262744 |
Clodagh M Carr1, David J Clarke1, Alan D W Dobson1,2.
Abstract
Plastic has rapidly transformed our world, with many aspects of human life now relying on a variety of plastic materials. Biological plastic degradation, which employs microorganisms and their degradative enzymes, has emerged as one way to address the unforeseen consequences of the waste streams that have resulted from mass plastic production. The focus of this review is microbial hydrolase enzymes which have been found to act on polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic. The best characterized examples are discussed together with the use of genomic and protein engineering technologies to obtain PET hydrolase enzymes for different applications. In addition, the obstacles which are currently limiting the development of efficient PET bioprocessing are presented. By continuing to study the possible mechanisms and the structural elements of key enzymes involved in microbial PET hydrolysis, and by assessing the ability of PET hydrolase enzymes to work under practical conditions, this research will help inform large-scale waste management operations. Finally, the contribution of microbial PET hydrolases in creating a potential circular PET economy will be explored. This review combines the current knowledge on enzymatic PET processing with proposed strategies for optimization and use, to help clarify the next steps in addressing pollution by PET and other plastics.Entities:
Keywords: PET hydrolases; PETases; biorecycling; bioremediation; circular economy; cutinases; plastic; synthetic polymer
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262744 PMCID: PMC7686037 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.571265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Structure of PET polymer. Polycondensation reaction of ethylene glycol (EG) and terephthalic acid (TPA) monomers gives polymeric polyethylene terephthalate (PET), with water as a byproduct.
Native microbial PET hydrolytic enzymes that have been biochemically characterized and that are of known amino acid sequence.
| Enzyme | Microbial source | NCBI accession number or PBD code | Seq length (aa) | Reaction temp (°C) | Substrate (crystallinity) | Reported degradation | References |
| ADH43200.1 | 489 | 40–45 | 3PET | TPA, MHET release | |||
| BAO42836.1 | 304 | 60–65 | Amorphous PET film and package-grade PET | TPA, MHET release | |||
| 1CEX | 214 | 30–60 | lcPET (7%) and bo-PET (35%) | 5% lcPET weight loss | |||
| 4OYY | 194 | 30–85 | lcPET (7%) bo-PET (35%) | 97 ± 3% lcPET weight loss | |||
| GAP38373.1 | 290 | 20–45 | lcPET (1.9%) and bottle-grade hcPET | TPA, MHET, EG release | |||
| Uncultured bacterium (from leaf-branch compost metagenome) | AEV21261.1 | 293 | 50–70 | Amorphous PET film | ≤5% weight loss | ||
| 6SBN | 312 | 30 | Amorphous PET film | MHET release | |||
| A0A0G3BI90 | 298 | 50 | PET nanoparticle agar | Zone of clearance | |||
| Uncultured bacterium (marine metagenome) | C3RYL0 | 308 | 50 | PET nanoparticle agar | Zone of clearance | ||
| R4YKL9 | 310 | 50 | PET nanoparticle agar | Zone of clearance | |||
| UPI0003945E1F | 298 | 50 | PET nanoparticle agar | Zone of clearance | |||
| CDN67546.1 | 292 | 50 | PET nanoparticle suspension | Reduced turbidity | |||
| CDN67545.1 | 289 | 50–60 | PET nanoparticle suspension | Reduced turbidity | |||
| CBY05529.1 | 319 | 55–65 | lcPET film | ≤11% weight loss | |||
| CBY05530.1 | 261 | 55–65 | lcPET film | ≤12% weight loss | |||
| WP_011291330.1 | 301 | 55 | Bottle-grade PET (10%) | ≈50% weight loss | |||
| ADV92525.1 | 262 | 50 | 3PET | TPA, HEB, MHET release | |||
| ADV92526.1 | 262 | 50 | 3PET and PET film (37%) | MHET, TPA, HEB release | |||
| ADV92527.1 | 262 | 50 | 3PET and PET film (37%) | MHET, TPA, HEB release | |||
| ADV92528.1 | 262 | 50 | 3PET and PET film (37%) | MHET, TPA, HEB release | |||
| AFA45122.1 | 262 | 50 | 3PET | TPA, HEB, MHET release |
FIGURE 2Proposed mechanism for PET processing in Ideonella sakaiensis. Extracellular PETase enzyme acts on PET polymer chains to give oligomeric mono-(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate (MHET), the monoester of terephthalic acid (TPA) and ethylene glycol (EG). Intermediates are transported through a membrane protein before reaching MHETase, which degrades MHET into TPA and EG. Finally, monomers are transported into the cytoplasm to be metabolized.
FIGURE 3System for the identification and functional testing of candidate PET hydrolase enzymes. Potential PET hydrolase sequences may be uncovered with an initial bioinformatic search of existing databases, by employing hidden Markov models. Candidate genes are then cloned into a heterologous host to verify activity against substrates, e.g., PCL and PET-nanoparticles.
FIGURE 4Enzyme preference for amorphous regions of PET over crystalline regions. PET hydrolase enzymes have been shown to favor lower crystallinity, amorphous areas of PET (shown in blue).
FIGURE 5Prospective overview of PET in the circular economy. Monomers resulting from biodegradation of PET may be recovered for manufacture of virgin PET (biorecycling) or combined with microbially synthesized monomers for a bio-based alternative (biosynthesis). Adipic acid, an important chemical precursor used primarily in nylon production, and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), which are both bio-based and biodegradable, are among the value-added products that may be obtained through transformation of TPA and EG monomers (bio-upcycling).