Abstract

BackgroundThe biological degradation of plastics is a promising method to counter the increasing pollution of our planet with artificial polymers and to develop eco-friendly recycling strategies. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a thermoplast industrially produced from fossil feedstocks since the 1940s, nowadays prevalently used in bottle packaging and textiles. Although established industrial processes for PET recycling exist, large amounts of PET still end up in the environment—a significant portion thereof in the world’s oceans. In 2016, Ideonella sakaiensis, a bacterium possessing the ability to degrade PET and use the degradation products as a sole carbon source for growth, was isolated. I. sakaiensis expresses a key enzyme responsible for the breakdown of PET into monomers: PETase. This hydrolase might possess huge potential for the development of biological PET degradation and recycling processes as well as bioremediation approaches of environmental plastic waste.ResultsUsing the photosynthetic microalga Phaeodactylum tricornutum as a chassis we generated a microbial cell factory capable of producing and secreting an engineered version of PETase into the surrounding culture medium. Initial degradation experiments using culture supernatant at 30 °C showed that PETase possessed activity against PET and the copolymer polyethylene terephthalate glycol (PETG) with an approximately 80-fold higher turnover of low crystallinity PETG compared to bottle PET. Moreover, we show that diatom produced PETase was active against industrially shredded PET in a saltwater-based environment even at mesophilic temperatures (21 °C). The products resulting from the degradation of the PET substrate were mainly terephthalic acid (TPA) and mono(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalic acid (MHET) estimated to be formed in the micromolar range under the selected reaction conditions.ConclusionWe provide a promising and eco-friendly solution for biological decomposition of PET waste in a saltwater-based environment by using a eukaryotic microalga instead of a bacterium as a model system. Our results show that via synthetic biology the diatom P. tricornutum indeed could be converted into a valuable chassis for biological PET degradation. Overall, this proof of principle study demonstrates the potential of the diatom system for future biotechnological applications in biological PET degradation especially for bioremediation approaches of PET polluted seawater.

Highlights

  • The biological degradation of plastics is a promising method to counter the increasing pollution of our planet with artificial polymers and to develop eco-friendly recycling strategies

  • The gene sequence encoding I. sakaiensis PET hydrolase (PETase) was adapted to the codon usage of P. tricornutum and expressed as fusion with gfp in the diatom to test whether the product ­(PETaseR280A-GFP) is correctly and efficiently synthesized

  • The ­PETaseR280A-GFP construct was expressed with the endogenous bacterial signal peptide (SP), GFP fluorescence was detected via confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) in the ER and most likely other compartments of the secretory pathway (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The biological degradation of plastics is a promising method to counter the increasing pollution of our planet with artificial polymers and to develop eco-friendly recycling strategies. I. sakaiensis expresses a key enzyme responsible for the breakdown of PET into monomers: PETase This hydrolase might possess huge potential for the development of biological PET degradation and recycling processes as well as bioremediation approaches of environmental plastic waste. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET)—a plastic material intensively used for packaging of liquids (bottles)/food and for production of synthetic textile fibres [8]—is produced from crude oil resources (terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol) with highly increasing rates predicted to exceed more than 70 million tons per year by 2020 (see [9] and references therein). Efficient processes for industrial PET (synthesis and) recycling are established, a significant fraction of PET waste is still incinerated, landfilled or ends up in the environment as macro-, meso-, micro-, and nano-particles due to improper disposal [10,11,12]

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