Tournier_2020_Nature_580_216

Reference

Title : An engineered PET depolymerase to break down and recycle plastic bottles - Tournier_2020_Nature_580_216
Author(s) : Tournier V , Topham CM , Gilles A , David B , Folgoas C , Moya-Leclair E , Kamionka E , Desrousseaux ML , Texier H , Gavalda S , Cot M , Guemard E , Dalibey M , Nomme J , Cioci G , Barbe S , Chateau M , Andre I , Duquesne S , Marty A
Ref : Nature , 580 :216 , 2020
Abstract :

Present estimates suggest that of the 359 million tons of plastics produced annually worldwide(1), 150-200 million tons accumulate in landfill or in the natural environment(2). Poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) is the most abundant polyester plastic, with almost 70 million tons manufactured annually worldwide for use in textiles and packaging(3). The main recycling process for PET, via thermomechanical means, results in a loss of mechanical properties(4). Consequently, de novo synthesis is preferred and PET waste continues to accumulate. With a high ratio of aromatic terephthalate units-which reduce chain mobility-PET is a polyester that is extremely difficult to hydrolyse(5). Several PET hydrolase enzymes have been reported, but show limited productivity(6,7). Here we describe an improved PET hydrolase that ultimately achieves, over 10 hours, a minimum of 90 per cent PET depolymerization into monomers, with a productivity of 16.7 grams of terephthalate per litre per hour (200 grams per kilogram of PET suspension, with an enzyme concentration of 3 milligrams per gram of PET). This highly efficient, optimized enzyme outperforms all PET hydrolases reported so far, including an enzyme(8,9) from the bacterium Ideonella sakaiensis strain 201-F6 (even assisted by a secondary enzyme(10)) and related improved variants(11-14) that have attracted recent interest. We also show that biologically recycled PET exhibiting the same properties as petrochemical PET can be produced from enzymatically depolymerized PET waste, before being processed into bottles, thereby contributing towards the concept of a circular PET economy.

PubMedSearch : Tournier_2020_Nature_580_216
PubMedID: 32269349
Gene_locus related to this paper: 9bact-g9by57

Related information

Substrate ETETETE
Gene_locus 9bact-g9by57
Structure 6THT    6THS

Citations formats

Tournier V, Topham CM, Gilles A, David B, Folgoas C, Moya-Leclair E, Kamionka E, Desrousseaux ML, Texier H, Gavalda S, Cot M, Guemard E, Dalibey M, Nomme J, Cioci G, Barbe S, Chateau M, Andre I, Duquesne S, Marty A (2020)
An engineered PET depolymerase to break down and recycle plastic bottles
Nature 580 :216

Tournier V, Topham CM, Gilles A, David B, Folgoas C, Moya-Leclair E, Kamionka E, Desrousseaux ML, Texier H, Gavalda S, Cot M, Guemard E, Dalibey M, Nomme J, Cioci G, Barbe S, Chateau M, Andre I, Duquesne S, Marty A (2020)
Nature 580 :216