User:Emily Hwang/Sandbox1
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| - | <StructureSection load='4eb0' size='350' side='right' caption='Leaf-branch compost bacterial cutinase, PDBID: 4EB0' scene='10/1075193/Wild_type_pet_hydrolase/ | + | <StructureSection load='4eb0' size='350' side='right' caption='Leaf-branch compost bacterial cutinase, PDBID: 4EB0' scene='10/1075193/Wild_type_pet_hydrolase/8'> |
| - | + | =Introduction= | |
| - | + | ==Environmental Issues== | |
| - | Pollution is one of the largest environmental issues facing our globe today. It is estimated that there is 359 million tons of plastic waste, excluding all other forms of material waste, | + | Pollution is one of the largest environmental issues facing our globe today. It is estimated that there is 359 million tons of plastic waste, excluding all other forms of material waste, accumulated every year around the world. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> Of this plastic waste, 150-200 million tons of it ends up sitting in landfills or ends up as pollution in our natural environments. The most common form of plastic waste is [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyethylene_terephthalate poly-ethylene terephthalate], or PET, which has an annual production accumulation of six billion pounds made, generally in the form of soft drink containers and plastic water bottles. <ref name="Boneta et. al. 2021">PMID:34085821</ref> It is recycled in some aspects with around only 10% recycled. <ref name="Boneta et. al. 2021">PMID:34085821</ref> The methods that are currently being implemented are not conducive on a global scale. |
| - | + | ==Current Plastic Recycling Methodology== | |
| - | Strides have been taken to find a method by which PET plastics can be recycled, but many of the current employments are not conducive on a large global scale. Enzymes, specifically cutinases and hydrolases, have been a major turning point in progression of recycling. However, many of the ones studied face the issue of having a low thermal stability. PET plastics have to be broken down and/or melted at temperatures around or above 70 degrees Celsius, which the current enzymes studied cannot maintain their structure and will denature under those conditions. Some of the enzymes also do not fully break down the plastics into their original starting materials, which can be reused/recycled to make new plastic products. If the plastics cannot be fully broken down, then they cannot be recycled. | + | Strides have been taken to find a method by which PET plastics can be recycled, but many of the current employments are not conducive on a large global scale. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> Enzymes, specifically cutinases and hydrolases, have been a major turning point in progression of recycling. However, many of the ones studied face the issue of having a low thermal stability. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> PET plastics have to be broken down and/or melted at temperatures around or above 70 degrees Celsius, which the current enzymes studied cannot maintain their structure and will denature under those conditions. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> Some of the enzymes also do not fully break down the plastics into their original starting materials, which can be reused/recycled to make new plastic products. If the plastics cannot be fully broken down, then they cannot be recycled. |
| - | One alternative among the population of cutinases and hydrolases exists, though, that can complete the goal of recycling PET plastics at and above its transition temperature: leaf compost cutinase, or LCC. In both its wild-type and mutated versions, the LCC has become a revolutionary enzyme that could work towards the progression of ending our global environmental recycling issues. | + | One alternative among the population of cutinases and hydrolases exists, though, that can complete the goal of recycling PET plastics at and above its transition temperature: leaf compost cutinase, or LCC. In both its wild-type and mutated versions, the LCC has become a revolutionary enzyme that could work towards the progression of ending our global environmental recycling issues. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> |
| + | =Structure= | ||
| + | ==Alpha-Beta Hydrolase Family== | ||
| + | Leaf-branch compost bacterial cutinase features an [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha/beta_hydrolase_superfamily alpha-beta hydrolase fold] as its catalytic domain. The alpha-beta hydrolase fold features a chymotrypsin-like catalytic triad with a conserved histidine, a hydrophobic binding pocket, and an oxyanion hole. The primary structure contains a nucleophilic motif of G-X-Nu-X-G. <ref name="Dimitriou et. al. 2019">PMID:330311984</ref> The flanking glycines allow the nucleophilic region of the active site to form a tight loop called the nucleophilic elbow. <ref name="Dimitriou et. al. 2019">PMID:330311984</ref> Some alpha-beta hydrolase enzymes have the motif HX*4D, which allows them to exhibit acyltransferase activity. <ref name="Dimitriou et. al. 2019">PMID:330311984</ref> Alpha-beta hydrolase enzymes have a wide range of functions including proteolysis, signal transduction, and lipid metabolism. <ref name="Lord et. al. 2013">PMID:23328280</ref> | ||
| + | ==Overall Topology== | ||
| + | <scene name='10/1075193/Wild_type_pet_hydrolase/8'>Leaf-branch compost cutinase</scene>, LCC, is a part of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serine_hydrolase serine hydrolase] family. It is a monomer that contains a total of 258 amino acid residues, with an amphipathic structure. It has a <scene name='10/1075193/Overall_topology/3'>secondary structure</scene> made up of alpha helices and beta turns, which correlate to the alpha-beta hydrolase family. The active site consists of a <scene name='10/1075191/Active_site_overall_topology/9'>catalytic triad</scene>, which is a common feature among serine hydrolases. Compared to other serine hydrolases and cutinases studied for plastic degradation, the LCC proved to be 33x more efficient. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | =Active Site= | ||
==Structure== | ==Structure== | ||
| - | + | The active site contains a <scene name='10/1075193/Hydrophobic_binding_pocket/8'>hydrophobic binding pocket</scene> which makes [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi-stacking aromatic pi-stacking] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_der_Waals_force Van der Waals interactions] with the aromatic rings in the PET ligand. There is currently no available structure of LCC with the PET ligand bound to it so the ligand position has been approximated in this model. | |
| - | + | <div style="word-wrap: break-word;"> | |
| - | + | ||
| - | + | ||
| - | + | ||
| - | + | ||
| - | The active site contains a <scene name='10/1075193/Hydrophobic_binding_pocket/ | + | |
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 50%;" | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 50%;" | ||
| - | |+ <b>Table 1. <scene name='10/1075193/Hydrophobic_binding_pocket/ | + | |+ <b>Table 1. <scene name='10/1075193/Hydrophobic_binding_pocket/8'>hydrophobic binding pocket</scene> list of residues in contact with PET substrate.</b> The table shows the 15 amino acid residues in the first contact shell with the PET substrate. Residues are sorted into columns based on which monomer they are interacting with. Monomers are labeled consistently with how they were labeled in the Tournier et al. article. |
|- | |- | ||
! Site -2 | ! Site -2 | ||
| Line 49: | Line 50: | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
| + | </div> | ||
| + | ==Mechanism== | ||
| + | Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) hydrolase (PETase) is a serine hydrolase that catalyzes the cleavage of ester bonds in PET polymers. <center>[[Image:PartImechaism.jpg|500 px|center|thumb|Figure 1. Active site of PETase highlighting catalytic residues and the first step of the reaction mechanism. Residues in pink represent the catalytic triad (S165, H242, and D210). Light blue represents the oxyanion hole residues (Y95 and M166).]]</center>The mechanism of the PET Hydrolase involves a proton relay by the <scene name='10/1075193/Cat_triad_ligand/5'>catalytic triad</scene>, making the catalytic S165 a good nucleophile. S165 attacks the carbonyl carbon in the -1 monomer of the PET Polymer, forming a tetrahedral intermediate. The pi electrons move onto the carbonyl oxygen, creating an oxyanion which is stabilized by the <scene name='10/1075193/Oxyanion_hole/4'>oxyanion hole</scene>, consisting of the backbone amide nitrogens of Y95 and M166. Then, the leaving group oxygen on the -2 monomer is protonated by H242, which is also a part of the catalytic triad. This facilitates the reformation of the carbonyl group upon collapse of the oxyanion and the severing of the <scene name='10/1075193/Scissile_bond/4'>scissile bond</scene>. | ||
| + | <br> <center>[[Image:Part2mech.jpg|500 px|center|thumb|Figure 2. Second step of the PET hydrolysis reaction by PETase.]]</center>In a second step, a water molecule is deprotonated by H242 and D210, allowing it to nucleophilically attack the carbonyl carbon, forming a tetrahedral intermediate and an oxyanion that is stabilized by the same <scene name='10/1075193/Oxyanion_hole/4'>oxyanion hole</scene>. <br> <center>[[Image:Part3Mech.jpg|500 px|center|thumb|Figure 3. Final step of PET hydrolysis by PETase.]]</center>In the final step, the water-activated nucleophile attacks the carbonyl carbon of S165, generating a second tetrahedral intermediate. The collapse of this intermediate regenerates the carbonyl double bond and removes the catalytic serine residue. The oxyanion hole residues stabilize the negative charge of this transition state, allowing the -1 monomer to be released from the enzyme, and the protons reset for further catalysis. | ||
| + | =Mutations= | ||
| + | Researchers have been investigating various mutations of PET hydrolase to enhance its catalytic ability. One group of researchers, Tournier et. al., have made mutations in the PET hydrolase active site. They identified the key residues involved in the catalytic mechanism by using a model of the <scene name='10/1075190/Ligand/3'>PET substrate</scene> (2-HE(MHET)₃) onto the enzyme (PDB ID 4EB0). The site, mainly a hydrophobic pocket, contained 11 residues targeted for mutagenesis. From this, they identified that the majority of enzymes' specific activity went down; however, the mutation of the <scene name='10/1075193/F243/5'>wild type F243</scene> to either isoleucine or tryptophan increased specific activity. Four target mutations introduced into the PET Hydrolase by Tournier et. al. demonstrated improved catalytic efficiency and thermal stability compared to its wild-type structure. | ||
| + | ==F243W Mutation== | ||
| + | The mutation of the F243 position to a tryptophan (<scene name='10/1075193/F243w_mutant/4'>F243W</scene>) was selected for further analysis based on its enhanced catalytic activity in the depolymerization of Pf-PET. The W243 mutation was shown to improve the substrate's binding affinity and increase the enzyme’s activity compared to the wild-type enzyme. This was one of the few variants that exhibited higher activity, and it was further analyzed through differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) to assess its stability. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | ==F243I Mutation== | ||
| + | Similar to the W243 mutation, the <scene name='10/1075193/F243i/6'>F243I mutation</scene> was identified as a variant with improved depolymerization activity of Pf-PET. The I243 mutation in LCC led to better substrate interaction than the wild-type enzyme. After generating all possible variants, this mutation was among the few that exhibited 75% or more of the wild-type specific activity. As with the W243 mutation, DSF was used to determine the melting temperature and thermal stability, supporting the increased activity observed with this mutation. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | == F243W/I Results == | ||
| + | '''Table 1.''' Specific activity and rate of wild-type, WCCG, and ICCG mutants. Initial rate was measured by the calculated rate of reaction by NaOH consumption. Specific activity was measured via pf-PET-depolymerization assay. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| - | = | + | <table> |
| - | + | <tr> | |
| - | + | <th style="width:0%"><th>Enzyme</th> | |
| - | + | <th style="width:5%"><th>Initial rate (g<sub>hydrolyzed PET</sub>•L<sup>-1</sup>•h<sup>-1</sup>)</th> | |
| - | == | + | <th style="width:5%"><th>Specific activity (mg<sub>TAeq</sub>h<sup>-1</sup>•mg<sub>enzyme</sub><sup>-1</sup>) ± SD </th> |
| - | + | </tr> | |
| - | + | <tr> | |
| - | Mutating the active site | + | <th style="width:0%"><td>Wild-Type</td> |
| - | ===D238C/S283C Mutations | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>25.7</td> |
| - | A disulfide bond was put into the structure of the LCC by mutating <scene name='10/1075191/Wild_type_d238_and_s283/ | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>81.9 ± 5.6 </td> |
| - | + | </tr> | |
| - | A <scene name='10/1075191/Mutation_y127_to_g127/ | + | <tr> |
| - | + | <th style="width:0%"><td>WCCG</td> | |
| - | <scene name='10/1075191/All_glycosylation_sites/5'>Glycosylation sites</scene> were introduced in a research study completed by Abhihit N. Shirke and others with the initial intention of inducing aggregation in the leaf branch cutinase / PET hydrolase wild-type. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> Glycosylation, as a general tool, is introduced into a protein to improve conformational stability. The specific type used in this study was N-linked side chain alteration. This means that the glycosylation sites were selected based on a starting asparagine residue followed by the sequence N-X-S or N-X-T, where X stands for any of the twenty amino acids except proline. <ref name="Imperiali">PMID:10600722</ref> This is implemented specifically because it allows for a better ability to choose the mutation sites. The first glycosylation site followed the N-T-S pattern with <scene name='10/1075191/First_glycosylation_site/5'>residues 197-199</scene>. The second was <scene name='10/1075191/Second_glycosylation_site/4'>residues 239-241</scene> with an N-A-S pattern, located nearest to the active site. The final was <scene name='10/1075191/Third_glycosylation_site/4'>residues 266-268</scene>, exhibiting a N-D-T sequence. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> With the combination of these glycosylation sites (without any other mutagenesis introduced to the enzyme), an overall 10-degree Celsius higher thermal stability was exhibited compared to the wild-type, with the structure of the modified PET hydrolase three times more stable. Catalytic efficiency also improved at the enzyme's known melting temperature. Even though the target point of introducing glycosylation sites was to induce aggregation in the PET hydrolase, depletion of aggregation was exhibited. The glycosylated protein took twice as long to unfold compared to the wild-type. For comparison, the threshold of 80 degrees Celsius was where the major difference in kinetic activity occurred: 85% of the glycosylated hydrolase maintained its catalytic activity, whereas the wild-type only had 50% of it working at the same temperature.<ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> The first and third sites showed these trends both together and on their own as the only glycosylation sites, but the second one nearest the active site showed no change when glycosylated on its own when compared to the wild type. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>30.3</td> |
| - | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>75.9 ± 5.9</td> | |
| - | + | </tr> | |
| - | Thermal stability is very important for enzyme-catalyzed PET degradation because the reaction must take place above the transition temperature of PET(70ºC), which allows the substrate to have optimal flexibility to fit into the active site. The disulfide bridge mutation raises the melting point of the enzyme from 84.7ºC to 94.5ºC.<ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> The covalent disulfide bond allows the tertiary structure of the enzyme to maintain its integrity at higher temperatures. | + | <tr> |
| - | + | <th style="width:0%"><td>ICCG</td> | |
| - | Both the ICCG and WCCG mutants designed by Tournier et al. exhibited a greater depolymerization efficiency than the wild type. The wild type LCC reached 53% depolymerization in 20 hours while both the ICCG and WCCG mutants reached 90% depolymerization in 10.5 hrs and 9.3 hrs respectively.<ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>31.0</td> |
| - | + | <th style="width:10%"><td>82.0 ± 3.9</td> | |
| - | The ICCG and WCCG mutations constructed by Tournier et al. | + | </tr> |
| - | + | </table> | |
| - | + | ||
| - | Enzyme-catalyzed plastic degradation produces less NaSO4 than other recycling processes. Current standard recycling processes produce approximately 80% NaSO4 by weight of recycled material | + | Both the WCCG and ICCG mutants display slightly higher initial rates (30.3 and 31.0 g hydrolyzed PET•L⁻¹•h⁻¹, respectively) compared to the wild-type enzyme (25.7 g hydrolyzed PET•L⁻¹•h⁻¹). This suggests that the mutations introduced in WCCG and ICCG enhance the rate of PET breakdown. |
| - | This improved enzyme-catalyzed mechanism of PET depolymerization has important implications in horizontal recycling | + | |
| + | The specific activity of the WCCG mutant (75.9 mg TAeq h⁻¹ mg⁻¹ enzyme) is slightly lower than that of wild-type PETase (81.9 mg TAeq h⁻¹ mg⁻¹ enzyme), whereas the ICCG mutant shows comparable specific activity to the wild-type (82.0 mg TAeq h⁻¹ mg⁻¹ enzyme). Mutating the active site F243 to I243 (in the ICCG mutant) and W243 (in the WCCG mutant) resulted in a percent gain of specific activity of 127.5% and 118.4% respectively. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | ==D238C/S283C Mutations== | ||
| + | A disulfide bond was put into the structure of the LCC by mutating <scene name='10/1075191/Wild_type_d238_and_s283/6'>wild type D238/S283</scene> into a <scene name='10/1075191/Mutation_d238_s283_to_cc/5'>cysteine disulfide bond</scene>. The disulfide bond specifically replaced those residues due to the triplet acidic residue sequence E208/D238/S283 serving as a common divalent metal binding site in other cutinase enzymes. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> This allowed the researchers to compare the activity of the disulfide bond mutation’s activity and stability to that of the cutinases with additional metal ions that showed increased activity and stability. (Disulfide bonds are also comparable to metal cations in terms of enhancing protein structural thermal stability.) The disulfide bond proved true to enhance the thermal stability of the PET hydrolase, increasing its melting temperature to 94.5 degrees Celsius to that of the wild-type’s 84.7 degree Celsius thermal stability. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> A tradeoff with catalytic activity occurred, though, decreasing enzymatic activity by 28% compared to the wild type. The thermal stability seemed to be more important than activity rates if the LCC still did its intended function. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | ==Y127G Mutation== | ||
| + | A <scene name='10/1075191/Mutation_y127_to_g127/5'>glycine mutation</scene> was introduced to residue the <scene name='10/1075191/Wild_type_y127/5'>wild type Y127</scene>. The main effect of this mutation was that it showed an increase in melting temperature, but with no effect on depolymerization of the PET substrates compared to the wild type. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> With the addition of the glycine, the ICC/WCC mutations showed a similar or higher specific activity with a higher melting point compared to the wild type (9.3 to 13.4 degrees Celsius higher). <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> Distances between the catalytic serine (S165) and the ligand where the scissile bond is located, as well as with the catalytic histidine (H242), decreased to enhance catalytic efficiency of LCC with new covalent interactions facilitated. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | ==Glycosylation== | ||
| + | <scene name='10/1075191/All_glycosylation_sites/5'>Glycosylation sites</scene> were introduced in a research study completed by Abhihit N. Shirke and others with the initial intention of inducing aggregation in the leaf branch cutinase / PET hydrolase wild-type. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> Glycosylation, as a general tool, is introduced into a protein to improve conformational stability. The specific type used in this study was N-linked side chain alteration. This means that the glycosylation sites were selected based on a starting asparagine residue followed by the sequence N-X-S or N-X-T, where X stands for any of the twenty amino acids except proline. <ref name="Imperiali">PMID:10600722</ref> This is implemented specifically because it allows for a better ability to choose the mutation sites. The first glycosylation site followed the N-T-S pattern with <scene name='10/1075191/First_glycosylation_site/5'>residues 197-199</scene>. The second was <scene name='10/1075191/Second_glycosylation_site/4'>residues 239-241</scene> with an N-A-S pattern, located nearest to the active site. The final was <scene name='10/1075191/Third_glycosylation_site/4'>residues 266-268</scene>, exhibiting a N-D-T sequence. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> With the combination of these glycosylation sites (without any other mutagenesis introduced to the enzyme), an overall 10-degree Celsius higher thermal stability was exhibited compared to the wild-type, with the structure of the modified PET hydrolase three times more stable. Catalytic efficiency also improved at the enzyme's known melting temperature. Even though the target point of introducing glycosylation sites was to induce aggregation in the PET hydrolase, depletion of aggregation was exhibited. The glycosylated protein took twice as long to unfold compared to the wild-type. For comparison, the threshold of 80 degrees Celsius was where the major difference in kinetic activity occurred: 85% of the glycosylated hydrolase maintained its catalytic activity, whereas the wild-type only had 50% of it working at the same temperature. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> The first and third sites showed these trends both together and on their own as the only glycosylation sites, but the second one nearest the active site showed no change when glycosylated on its own when compared to the wild type. <ref name="Shirke">PMID:29328676</ref> | ||
| + | =Biochemical Results= | ||
| + | ==Improved Thermal Stability== | ||
| + | Thermal stability is very important for enzyme-catalyzed PET degradation because the reaction must take place above the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_temperature transition temperature] of PET (70ºC), which allows the substrate to have optimal flexibility to fit into the active site. The disulfide bridge mutation raises the melting point of the enzyme from 84.7ºC to 94.5ºC. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> The covalent disulfide bond allows the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_temperature tertiary structure] of the enzyme to maintain its integrity at higher temperatures. | ||
| + | ==Depolymerization Efficiency of Mutant LCCs== | ||
| + | Both the ICCG and WCCG mutants designed by Tournier et al. exhibited a greater depolymerization efficiency than the wild type. The wild type LCC reached 53% depolymerization in 20 hours while both the ICCG and WCCG mutants reached 90% depolymerization in 10.5 hrs and 9.3 hrs respectively. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> | ||
| + | ==Enhanced Catalytic Efficiency== | ||
| + | The ICCG and WCCG mutations constructed by Tournier et al. showed a return to the wild type activity and beyond. The WCCG quadruple mutation showed a 122% increase in catalysis, with an increased ability to sustain its structure at temperatures 6.2 degrees higher than the wild type (84.7 degrees Celsius). <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> The ICCG quadruple mutation showed a 2% decrease in activity compared to the wild type, but a thermal stability increase by 10.1 degrees Celsius. <ref name="Tournier et. al. 2020">PMID:32269349</ref> The increase in specific activity of the F243W mutation could be attributed to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_bond hydrogen bond] formed between the amine group on tryptophan and a carbonyl oxygen of the -1 monomer, with the aromatic ring in W243 retaining pi-stacking and Van der Waals interactions made by F243 in the wild type. These additional intermolecular forces between the active site and the ligand likely led to improved binding affinity which increased specific activity. | ||
| + | =Conclusions= | ||
| + | ==Implications for Plastic Recycling== | ||
| + | Enzyme-catalyzed plastic degradation produces less [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_sulfate#Chemical_industry sodium sulfate NaSO4] than other recycling processes. Current standard recycling processes produce approximately 80% NaSO4 by weight of recycled material. <ref name="Aqua Metals">The sodium sulfate dilemma: The unforeseen challenge of lithium battery recycling.[https://aquametals.com/news/the-unforeseen-challenge-of-lithium-battery-recycling-the-sodium-sulfate-dilemma/] (2023).</ref> There are many negative environmental impacts of NaSO4 including acid rain, respiratory health concerns, reduced visibility due to light refraction by atmospheric particles, and disrupting aquatic ecosystems. Therefore, it is essential to mitigate NaSO4 waste produced in recycling processes. | ||
| + | This improved enzyme-catalyzed mechanism of PET depolymerization has important implications in horizontal recycling–the process of recycling used products back into their raw materials to create the same or similar products <ref name="Suntory">Recycle: Promote “Bottle to Bottle” Horizontal Recycling.[https://www.suntory.com/csr/env_circular/recycle/#:~:text=%E2%80%9CBottle%20to%20bottle%E2%80%9D%20horizontal%20recycling%20refers%20to%20recycling%20used%20PET,bottle%E2%80%9D%20horizontal%20recycling%20since%20then.&text=Mechanical%20recycling:%20A%20method%20in,suitable%20quality%20for%20beverage%20containers.] </ref>, and could help to close the loop of the circular economy. The LCC mutant engineered by Tournier et al. is a promising aid in the issue of excessive plastic disposal. | ||
| + | |||
| + | </StructureSection> | ||
| + | =References= | ||
| + | <references/> | ||
| + | =Student Contributors= | ||
| + | *Georgia Apple | ||
| + | *Emily Hwang | ||
| + | *Anjali Rabindran | ||
Revision as of 13:07, 15 April 2025
| |||||||||||
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 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. An engineered PET depolymerase to break down and recycle plastic bottles. Nature. 2020 Apr;580(7802):216-219. doi: 10.1038/s41586-020-2149-4. Epub 2020 Apr, 8. PMID:32269349 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2149-4
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Boneta S, Arafet K, Moliner V. QM/MM Study of the Enzymatic Biodegradation Mechanism of Polyethylene Terephthalate. J Chem Inf Model. 2021 Jun 28;61(6):3041-3051. PMID:34085821 doi:10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00394
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Shirke AN, White C, Englaender JA, Zwarycz A, Butterfoss GL, Linhardt RJ, Gross RA. Stabilizing Leaf and Branch Compost Cutinase (LCC) with Glycosylation: Mechanism and Effect on PET Hydrolysis. Biochemistry. 2018 Feb 20;57(7):1190-1200. PMID:29328676 doi:10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01189
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 . PMID:330311984
- ↑ Lord CC, Thomas G, Brown JM. Mammalian alpha beta hydrolase domain (ABHD) proteins: Lipid metabolizing enzymes at the interface of cell signaling and energy metabolism. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2013 Apr;1831(4):792-802. PMID:23328280 doi:10.1016/j.bbalip.2013.01.002
- ↑ Imperiali B, O'Connor SE. Effect of N-linked glycosylation on glycopeptide and glycoprotein structure. Curr Opin Chem Biol. 1999 Dec;3(6):643-9. PMID:10600722
- ↑ The sodium sulfate dilemma: The unforeseen challenge of lithium battery recycling.[1] (2023).
- ↑ Recycle: Promote “Bottle to Bottle” Horizontal Recycling.[2]
Student Contributors
- Georgia Apple
- Emily Hwang
- Anjali Rabindran
