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The enzymes could enable plastic bottles to be fully recycled for the first time.
Photograph: Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty Images
Scientists have created a mutant enzyme that breaks down plastic
drinks bottles – by accident. The breakthrough could help solve the
global plastic pollution crisis by enabling for the first time the full
recycling of bottles.
The new research was spurred by the discovery in 2016 of the first bacterium that had naturally evolved to eat plastic, at a waste dump in Japan. Scientists have now revealed the detailed structure of the crucial enzyme produced by the bug.
The international team then tweaked the enzyme to see how it had
evolved, but tests showed they had inadvertently made the molecule even
better at breaking down the PET (polyethylene terephthalate) plastic
used for soft drink bottles. “What actually turned out was we improved
the enzyme, which was a bit of a shock,” said Prof John McGeehan, at the
University of Portsmouth, UK, who led the research. “It’s great and a
real finding.”
The
mutant enzyme takes a few days to start breaking down the plastic – far
faster than the centuries it takes in the oceans. But the researchers
are optimistic this can be speeded up even further and become a viable
large-scale process.
“What we are hoping to do is use this enzyme to turn this plastic
back into its original components, so we can literally recycle it back
to plastic,” said McGeehan. “It means we won’t need to dig up any more
oil and, fundamentally, it should reduce the amount of plastic in the
environment.”
About 1m plastic bottles are sold each minute around the globe and, with just 14% recycled, many end up in the oceans where they have polluted even the remotest parts,
harming marine life and potentially people who eat seafood. “It is
incredibly resistant to degradation. Some of those images are horrific,”
said McGeehan. “It is one of these wonder materials that has been made a
little bit too well.”
However, currently even those bottles that are recycled can only be
turned into opaque fibres for clothing or carpets. The new enzyme
indicates a way to recycle clear plastic bottles back into clear plastic
bottles, which could slash the need to produce new plastic.
“You are always up against the fact that oil is cheap, so virgin PET
is cheap,” said McGeehan. “It is so easy for manufacturers to generate
more of that stuff, rather than even try to recycle. But I believe there
is a public driver here: perception is changing so much that companies
are starting to look at how they can properly recycle these.”
The new research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, began by determining the precise structure of the enzyme produced by the Japanese bug. The team used the Diamond Light Source, near Oxford, UK, an intense beam of X-rays that is 10bn times brighter than the sun and can reveal individual atoms.
The structure of the enzyme looked very similar to one evolved by
many bacteria to break down cutin, a natural polymer used as a
protective coating by plants. But when the team manipulated the enzyme
to explore this connection, they accidentally improved its ability to
eat PET.
“It is a modest improvement – 20% better – but that is not the
point,” said McGeehan. “It’s incredible because it tells us that the
enzyme is not yet optimised. It gives us scope to use all the technology
used in other enzyme development for years and years and make a
super-fast enzyme.”
Industrial enzymes are widely used in, for example, washing powders
and biofuel production, They have been made to work up to 1,000 times
faster in a few years, the same timescale McGeehan envisages for the
plastic-eating enzyme. A patent has been filed on the specific mutant
enzyme by the Portsmouth researchers and those from the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado.
One possible improvement being explored is to transplant the mutant
enzyme into an “extremophile bacteria” that can survive temperatures
above the 70C melting point of PET – the plastic is likely to degrade
10-100 times faster when molten.
Earlier work had shown that some fungi can break down PET plastic, which makes up about 20% of global plastic production. But bacteria are far easier to harness for industrial uses.
Other types of plastic could be broken down by bacteria currently
evolving in the environment, McGeehan said: “People are now searching
vigorously for those.” PET sinks in seawater but some scientists have
conjectured that plastic-eating bugs might one day be sprayed on the
huge plastic garbage patches in the oceans to clean them up.
“I think [the new research] is very exciting work, showing there is
strong potential to use enzyme technology to help with society’s growing
waste problem,” said Oliver Jones, a chemist at RMIT University in
Melbourne, Australia, and not part of the research team.
“Enzymes are non-toxic, biodegradable and can be produced in large
amounts by microorganisms,” he said. “There is still a way to go before
you could recycle large amounts of plastic with enzymes, and reducing
the amount of plastic produced in the first place might, perhaps, be
preferable. [But] this is certainly a step in a positive direction.”
Prof Adisa Azapagic, at the University of Manchester in the UK,
agreed the enzyme could be useful but added: “A full life-cycle
assessment would be needed to ensure the technology does not solve one
environmental problem – waste – at the expense of others, including
additional greenhouse gas emissions.”
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2 comments:
Could they create an enzyme that will eat the Bush/Clinton/Obama/Federal Reserve/DC Crime Families ?
You've got a great point there.... good question!
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