Earth is flooded with plastics and the need for sustainable recycling strategies for polymers has become increasingly urgent. Enzyme‐based hydrolysis of post‐consumer plastic is an emerging strategy for closed‐loop recycling of polyethylene terephthalate (PET). The polyester hydrolase PHL7, isolated from a compost metagenome, completely hydrolyzes amorphous PET films, releasing 91 mg of terephthalic acid per hour and mg of enzyme. Vertical scanning interferometry shows degradation rates of the PET film of 6.8 μm h−1. Structural analysis indicates the importance of leucine at position 210 for the extraordinarily high PET‐hydrolyzing activity of PHL7. Within 24 h, 0.6 mgenzyme gPET−1 completely degrades post‐consumer thermoform PET packaging in an aqueous buffer at 70 °C without any energy‐intensive pretreatments. Terephthalic acid recovered from the enzymatic hydrolysate is then used to synthesize virgin PET, demonstrating the potential of polyester hydrolases as catalysts in sustainable PET recycling processes with a low carbon footprint.
Cytochrome P450 BM3 (CYP102A1) from Bacillus megaterium is an interesting target for biotechnological applications, because of its vast substrate variety combined with high P450 monooxygenase activity. The low stability in vitro could be overcome by immobilization on surfaces. Here we describe a novel method for immobilization on metal surfaces by using selectively binding peptides. A P450 BM3 triple mutant (3M-P450BM3: A74G, F87V, L188Q) was purified as protein thioester and ligated to indium tin oxide or gold binding peptides (BP) named HighSP-BP and Cys-BP, respectively. The ligation products were characterized by Western Blot and tryptic digestion combined with mass spectrometry, and displayed high affinity binding on the depicted surfaces. Next, we could demonstrate by benzyloxyresorufin O-dealkylation assay (BROD assay) that the activity of immobilized ligation products is higher than for the soluble form. The study provides a new tool for selective modification and immobilization of P450 variants.
Biomaterials employed for neural stimulation, as well as brain/machine interfaces, offer great perspectives to combat neurodegenerative diseases, while application of lab-on-a-chip devices such as multielectrode arrays is a promising alternative to assess neural function in vitro. For bioelectronic monitoring, nanostructured microelectrodes are required, which exhibit an increased surface area where the detection sensitivity is not reduced by the self-impedance of the electrode. In our study, we investigated the interaction of neurons (SH-SY5Y) and glial cells (U-87 MG) with nanocolumnar titanium nitride (TiN) electrode materials in comparison to TiN with larger surface grains, gold, and indium tin oxide (ITO) substrates. Glial cells showed an enhanced proliferation on TiN materials; however, these cells spread evenly distributed over all the substrate surfaces. By contrast, neurons proliferated fastest on nanocolumnar TiN and formed large cell agglomerations. We implemented a radial autocorrelation function of cellular positions combined with various clustering algorithms. These combined analyses allowed us to quantify the largest cluster on nanocolumnar TiN; however, on ITO and gold, neurons spread more homogeneously across the substrates. As SH-SY5Y cells tend to grow in clusters under physiologic conditions, our study proves nanocolumnar TiN as a potential bioactive material candidate for the application of microelectrodes in contact with neurons. To this end, the employed K-means clustering algorithm together with radial autocorrelation analysis is a valuable tool to quantify cell-surface interaction and cell organization to evaluate biomaterials’ performance in vitro.
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