posted on 2023-03-27, 04:43authored byKristina
Naasen Hellesnes, Shunmathi Vijayaraj, Peter Fojan, Evamaria Petersen, Gaston Courtade
In recent years, the drawbacks of plastics have become
evident,
with plastic pollution becoming a major environmental issue. There
is an urgent need to find solutions to efficiently manage plastic
waste by using novel recycling methods. Biocatalytic recycling of
plastics by using enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis is one such solution
that has gained interest, in particular for recycling poly(ethylene
terephthalate) (PET). To provide insights into PET hydrolysis by cutinases,
we have here characterized the kinetics of a PET-hydrolyzing cutinase
from Fusarium solani pisi (FsC) at
different pH values, mapped the interaction between FsC and the PET
analogue BHET by using NMR spectroscopy, and monitored product release
directly and in real time by using time-resolved NMR experiments.
We found that primarily aliphatic side chains around the active site
participate in the interaction with BHET and that pH conditions and
a mutation around the active site (L182A) can be used to tune the
relative amounts of degradation products. Moreover, we propose that
the low catalytic performance of FsC on PET is caused by poor substrate
binding combined with slow MHET hydrolysis. Overall, our results provide
insights into obstacles that preclude efficient PET hydrolysis by
FsC and suggest future approaches for overcoming these obstacles and
generating efficient PET-hydrolyzing enzymes.