posted on 2024-09-17, 15:40authored byThomas
M. Groseclose, Erin A. Kober, Matilda Clark, Benjamin Moore, Shounak Banerjee, Victoria Bemmer, Gregg T. Beckham, Andrew R. Pickford, Taraka T. Dale, Hau B. Nguyen
The ability of enzymes to hydrolyze the ubiquitous polyester,
poly(ethylene
terephthalate) (PET), has enabled the potential for bioindustrial
recycling of this waste plastic. To date, many of these PET hydrolases
have been engineered for improved catalytic activity and stability,
but current screening methods have limitations in screening large
libraries, including under high-temperature conditions. Here, we developed
a platform that can simultaneously interrogate PET hydrolase libraries
of 104–105 variants (per round) for protein
solubility, thermostability, and activity via paired, plate-based
split green fluorescent protein and model substrate screens. We then
applied this platform to improve the performance of a benchmark PET
hydrolase, leaf-branch compost cutinase, by directed evolution. Our
engineered enzyme exhibited higher catalytic activity relative to
the benchmark, LCC-ICCG, on amorphous PET film coupon substrates (∼9.4%
crystallinity) in pH-controlled bioreactors at both 65 °C (8.5%
higher conversion at 48 h and 38% higher maximum rate, at 2.9% substrate
loading) and 68 °C (11.2% higher conversion at 48 h and 43% higher
maximum rate, at 16.5% substrate loading), up to 48 h, highlighting
the potential of this screening platform to accelerate enzyme development
for PET recycling.