1.Commentary: polymer binding modules accelerate enzymatic degradation of poly(ethylene terephthalate).
Yi LU ; Ruizhi HAN ; Ulrich SCHWANEBERG ; Yu JI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(5):1883-1888
The large scale production and indiscriminate use of plastics led to serious environmental pollution. To reduce the negative effects of plastics waste on the environment, an approach of enzymatic degradation was put forward to catalyze plastics degradation. Protein engineering strategies have been applied to improve the plastics degrading enzyme properties such as activity and thermal stability. In addition, polymer binding modules were found to accelerate the enzymatic degradation of plastics. In this article, we introduced a recent work published in Chem Catalysis, which studied the role of binding modules in enzymatic hydrolysis of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) at high-solids loadings. Graham et al. found that binding modules accelerated PET enzymatic degradation at low PET loading (< 10 wt%) and the enhanced degradation cannot be observed at high PET loading (10 wt%-20 wt%). This work is beneficial for the industrial application of polymer binding modules in plastics degradation.
Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
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Polymers
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Plastics
;
Ethylenes
2.Advances in poly(ethylene terephthalate) hydrolases.
Zhiyi ZHAO ; Guoqiang ZHANG ; Kun LIU ; Shengying LI
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(5):1998-2014
Plastics have brought invaluable convenience to human life since it was firstly synthesized in the last century. However, the stable polymer structure of plastics led to the continuous accumulation of plastic wastes, which poses serious threats to the ecological environment and human health. Poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) is the most widely produced polyester plastics. Recent researches on PET hydrolases have shown great potential of enzymatic degradation and recycling of plastics. Meanwhile, the biodegradation pathway of PET has become a reference model for the biodegradation of other plastics. This review summarizes the sources of PET hydrolases and their degradation capacity, degradation mechanism of PET by the most representative PET hydrolase-IsPETase, and recently reported highly efficient degrading enzymes through enzyme engineering. The advances of PET hydrolases may facilitate the research on the degradation mechanism of PET and further exploration and engineering of efficient PET degradation enzymes.
Humans
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Hydrolases/metabolism*
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
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Plastics/metabolism*
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Ethylenes
3.Expression, purification and characterization of a novel bis (hydroxyethyl) terephthalate hydrolase from Hydrogenobacter thermophilus.
Yangyang CHEN ; Jian GAO ; Yipei ZHAO ; Hao WANG ; Xu HAN ; Jie ZHANG ; Qun GU ; Ying HOU ; Weidong LIU
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(5):2015-2026
PET (polyethylene terephthalate) is one of the most important petrochemicals that is widely used in mineral water bottles, food and beverage packaging and textile industry. Because of its stability under environmental conditions, the massive amount of PET wastes caused serious environmental pollution. The use of enzymes to depolymerize PET wastes and upcycling is one of the important directions for plastics pollution control, among which the key is the depolymerization efficiency of PET by PET hydrolase. BHET (bis(hydroxyethyl) terephthalate) is the main intermediate of PET hydrolysis, its accumulation can hinder the degradation efficiency of PET hydrolase significantly, and the synergistic use of PET hydrolase and BHET hydrolase can improve the PET hydrolysis efficiency. In this study, a dienolactone hydrolase from Hydrogenobacter thermophilus which can degrade BHET (HtBHETase) was identified. After heterologous expression in Escherichia coli and purification, the enzymatic properties of HtBHETase were studied. HtBHETase shows higher catalytic activity towards esters with short carbon chains such as p-nitrophenol acetate. The optimal pH and temperature of the reaction with BHET were 5.0 and 55 ℃, respectively. HtBHETase exhibited excellent thermostability, and retained over 80% residual activity after treatment at 80 ℃ for 1 hour. These results indicate that HtBHETase has potential in biological PET depolymerization, which may facilitate the enzymatic degradation of PET.
Hydrolases/metabolism*
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Bacteria/metabolism*
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Hydrolysis
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
4.Enzymatic properties and degradation characterization of a bis(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate hydrolase from Saccharothrix sp.
Jie ZHANG ; Ruida SHAN ; Xia LI ; Zhixiong ZENG ; Dengyue SUN
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(5):2027-2039
The discovery of new enzymes for poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) degradation has been a hot topic of research globally. Bis-(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate (BHET) is an intermediate compound in the degradation of PET and competes with PET for the substrate binding site of the PET-degrading enzyme, thereby inhibiting further degradation of PET. Discovery of new BHET degradation enzymes may contribute to improving the degradation efficiency of PET. In this paper, we discovered a hydrolase gene sle (ID: CP064192.1, 5085270-5086049) from Saccharothrix luteola, which can hydrolyze BHET into mono-(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate (MHET) and terephthalic acid (TPA). BHET hydrolase (Sle) was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli using a recombinant plasmid, and the highest protein expression was achieved at a final concentration of 0.4 mmol/L of isopropyl-β-d-thiogalactoside (IPTG), an induction duration of 12 h and an induction temperature of 20 ℃. The recombinant Sle was purified by nickel affinity chromatography, anion exchange chromatography, and gel filtration chromatography, and its enzymatic properties were also characterized. The optimum temperature and pH of Sle were 35 ℃ and 8.0, and more than 80% of the enzyme activity could be maintained in the range of 25-35 ℃ and pH 7.0-9.0 and Co2+ could improve the enzyme activity. Sle belongs to the dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) superfamily and possesses the typical catalytic triad of the family, and the predicted catalytic sites are S129, D175, and H207. Finally, the enzyme was identified as a BHET degrading enzyme by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). This study provides a new enzyme resource for the efficient enzymatic degradation of PET plastics.
Actinomycetales/genetics*
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Hydrolases/metabolism*
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Phthalic Acids/chemistry*
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
5.Engineering the plastic degradation enzyme Ple629 from marine consortium to improve its thermal stability.
Yipei ZHAO ; Hao WANG ; Pan WU ; Zhishuai LI ; Fufeng LIU ; Qun GU ; Weidong LIU ; Jian GAO ; Xu HAN
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(5):2040-2052
Petrochemical-derived polyester plastics such as polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) have been widely used. However, the difficulty to be degraded in nature (PET) or the long biodegradation cycle (PBAT) resulted in serious environmental pollution. In this connection, treating these plastic wastes properly becomes one of the challenges of environment protection. From the perspective of circular economy, biologically depolymerizing the waste of polyester plastics and reusing the depolymerized products is one of the most promising directions. Recent years have seen many reports on polyester plastics degrading organisms and enzymes. Highly efficient degrading enzymes, especially those with better thermal stability, will be conducive to their application. The mesophilic plastic-degrading enzyme Ple629 from the marine microbial metagenome is capable of degrading PET and PBAT at room temperature, but it cannot tolerate high temperature, which hampers its potential application. On the basis of the three-dimensional structure of Ple629 obtained from our previous study, we identified some sites which might be important for its thermal stability by structural comparison and mutation energy analysis. We carried out transformation design, and performed expression, purification and thermal stability determination of the mutants. The melting temperature (Tm) values of mutants V80C and D226C/S281C were increased by 5.2 ℃ and 6.9 ℃, respectively, and the activity of mutant D226C/S281C was also increased by 1.5 times compared with that of the wild-type enzyme. These results provide useful information for future engineering and application of Ple629 in polyester plastic degradation.
Plastics/metabolism*
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
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Biodegradation, Environmental
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Metagenome
6.Structure-based engineering of PET hydrolase from Ideonella sakaiensis.
Chunqi CHEN ; Xu HAN ; Weidong LIU ; Lixin MA ; Ke LIU ; Rey-Ting GUO
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2021;37(9):3268-3275
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a synthetic polymer consisting of ester bond-linked terephthalate and ethylene glycol. Tremendous amounts of PET have been produced and majority of them enters terrestrial and marine environment as wastes, posing serious threats to the global ecosystems. In 2016, a PET hydrolase from a PET-assimilating bacterium Ideonalla sakaiensis was reported and termed as IsPETase. This enzyme outperforms other PET-hydrolyzing enzymes in terms of its PET hydrolytic activity at ambient temperature, thus holds a great promise for PET biodegradation. In order to improve IsPETase activity, we conducted structure-based engineering to modify the putative substrate-binding tunnel. Among the several variants to the N233 residue of IsPETase, we discovered that the substitution of N233 with alanine increases its PET hydrolytic activity, which can be further enhanced when combined with a R280A mutation. We also determined the X-ray crystal structure of the IsPETase N233A variant, which shares nearly identical fold to the WT protein, except for an open end of subsite Ⅱ. We hypothesized that the smaller side chain of N233A variant might lead to an extended subsite Ⅱ for PET binding, which subsequently increases the enzymatic activity. Thus, this study provides new clues for further structure-based engineering of PETase.
Burkholderiales/enzymology*
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Hydrolases/genetics*
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
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Protein Engineering
7.Biodegradation of polyethylene terephthalate: a review.
Yufeng JIN ; Jiarong QIU ; Liangqing ZHANG ; Menglei ZHU
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(11):4445-4462
Plastics are widely used in human daily life, which bring great convenience. Nevertheless, the disposal of a large amount of plastic wastes also brings great pressure to the environment. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a polymer thermoplastic material produced from petroleum. It has become one of the most commonly used plastics in the world due to its durability, high transparency, light weight and other characteristics. PET can exist in nature for a long time due to its complex structure and the difficulty in degradation, which causes serious pollution to the global ecological environment, and threatens human health. The degradation of PET wastes has since become one of the global challenges. Compared with physical and chemical methods, biodegradation is the greenest way for treating PET wastes. This review summarizes the recent advances on PET biodegradation including microbial and enzymatic degradation of PET, biodegradation pathway, biodegradation mechanisms, and molecular modification of PET-degrading enzymes. In addition, the prospect for achieveing efficient degradation of PET, searching and improving microorganisms or enzymes that can degrade PET of high crystallinity are presented, with the aimto facilitate the development, application and molecular modification of PET biodegradation microorganisms or enzymes.
Humans
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Polyethylene Terephthalates/metabolism*
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Polymers
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Biodegradation, Environmental
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Petroleum
8.Preparation of recombinant cutinase and its application in surface modification of poly (ethylene terephthalate).
Yao ZHANG ; Sheng CHEN ; Dan WU ; Miao HE ; Kongliang ZHU ; Jian CHEN ; Jing WU
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(7):1057-1064
Fermentation and induction conditions for recombinant Escherichia coli expressing Thermobifida fusca cutinase were optimized in flasks and 3L fermenter. Surface modification of poly (ethylene terephthalate) fibers with cutinase was also discussed. The results showed that, cutinase yield reached 128 U/mL by adding 2 g/L inducer lactose and 0.5% glycine. In the fed-batch culture in a 3 L fermenter, the maximum biomass cutinase activity was up to 506 U/mL, which is the highest bacterial cutinase activity reported by far. Recombinant cutinase was used to modify polyester fibers and terephthalic acid substance was detected by using UV analysis. The dyeing and wetting properties of cutinase treated fibers were higher than untreated fibers. Combined utilization of cutinase and Triton X-100 can significantly improve the hydrophilicity of polyester. This is the first report of surface modification on polyester fibers by bacterial cutinase.
Actinomycetales
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enzymology
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genetics
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Carboxylic Ester Hydrolases
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biosynthesis
;
chemistry
;
genetics
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Escherichia coli
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genetics
;
metabolism
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Fermentation
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Polyethylene Glycols
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chemistry
;
Polyethylene Terephthalates
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Recombinant Proteins
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biosynthesis
;
genetics
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Surface Properties