Exploring the substrate spectrum of phylogenetically distinct bacterial polyesterases

Author:

Makryniotis Konstantinos1,Nikolaivits Efstratios1,Taxeidis George1,Nikodinovic‐Runic Jasmina2,Topakas Evangelos1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Industrial Biotechnology & Biocatalysis Group Biotechnology Laboratory School of Chemical Engineering National Technical University of Athens Athens Greece

2. Eco‐Biotechnology & Drug Development Group Laboratory for Microbial Molecular Genetics and Ecology Institute of Molecular Genetics and Genetic Engineering University of Belgrade Belgrade Serbia

Abstract

AbstractThe rapid escalation of plastic waste accumulation presents a significant threat of the modern world, demanding an immediate solution. Over the last years, utilization of the enzymatic machinery of various microorganisms has emerged as an environmentally friendly asset in tackling this pressing global challenge. Thus, various hydrolases have been demonstrated to effectively degrade polyesters. Plastic waste streams often consist of a variety of different polyesters, as impurities, mainly due to wrong disposal practices, rendering recycling process challenging. The elucidation of the selective degradation of polyesters by hydrolases could offer a proper solution to this problem, enhancing the recyclability performance. Towards this, our study focused on the investigation of four bacterial polyesterases, including DaPUase, IsPETase, PfPHOase, and Se1JFR, a novel PETase‐like lipase. The enzymes, which were biochemically characterized and structurally analyzed, demonstrated degradation ability of synthetic plastics. While a consistent pattern of polyesters’ degradation was observed across all enzymes, Se1JFR stood out in the degradation of PBS, PLA, and polyether PU. Additionally, it exhibited comparable results to IsPETase, a benchmark mesophilic PETase, in the degradation of PCL and semi‐crystalline PET. Our results point out the wide substrate spectrum of bacterial hydrolases and underscore the significant potential of PETase‐like enzymes in polyesters degradation.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Wiley

Reference55 articles.

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2. Biodegradation of polymers in managing plastic waste — A review

3. Microbial and Enzymatic Degradation of Synthetic Plastics

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