Complete degradation of PET waste using a thermophilic microbe-enzyme system

Int J Biol Macromol. 2024 Mar;260(Pt 2):129538. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.129538. Epub 2024 Jan 19.

Abstract

Enzymatic degradation has been proposed as a suitable solution for addressing PET pollution, but approximately 10 % of PET is left as nonbiodegradable. Microbes can completely degrade PET at the gram level per year. Based on the complementary benefits of microbes and enzymes, a microbe-enzyme system was created to completely degrade PET. Here, a thermophilic microbe-enzyme (TME) system composed of Bacillus thermoamylovorans JQ3 and leaf-branch compost cutinase variant (ICCG) was used to demonstrate the synergistic degradation of PET, enabling 100 % degradation of PET waste at a high PET loading level (360 g/L). Six endogenous PET hydrolases of strain JQ3 were discovered by employing an ester bond hydrolysis function-first genome mining (EGM) strategy and first successfully expressed in E. coli. These hydrolases could release TPA as the final product from PET and preferentially degraded BHET instead of MHET. Of these, carboxylesterase 39_5 and ICCG could degrade PET in a synergistic manner to generate 50 μM of TPA, which was greater than the sum of the individual treatments. Finally, the degradation pathway of the TME system was speculated to include biofilm formation, PET degradation and utilization. The successful implementation of this study rendered a scale-up degradation feasible of PET at a lower cost.

Keywords: Bacillus thermoamylovorans; Microbe-enzyme; PET degradation; Synergistic effect; Thermostability.

MeSH terms

  • Escherichia coli* / metabolism
  • Hydrolases / chemistry
  • Hydrolysis
  • Polyethylene Terephthalates* / chemistry

Substances

  • Polyethylene Terephthalates
  • Hydrolases