Mixed polyamide and polyester upcycling via chemical autoxidation and engineered Pseudomonas putida

Abstract

Polyamides, such as nylons, are often used in multi-component materials, like textiles and packaging, and are accompanied with unique recycling challenges. Recently, autoxidation and bioconversion has emerged as a tandem approach for the conversion of mixed plastics waste to single products, however the fate of polyamides in these processes is unknown. Here, we optimized the autoxidation of nylon-6 and nylon-6,6 depolymerization, achieving >92 mol% nitrogen recovery from both substrates, predominantly as acetamide, and 20–27 mol% carbon recovery (not including acetamide). Experiments with 13C-labeled acetic acid demonstrated that the carbon in acetamide was solvent derived. Autoxidation of mixed nylon-6 and poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) post-consumer fibers resulted in similar carbon and nitrogen recoveries from nylon, while PET was depolymerized to terephthalic acid (TPA) at >65 C-mol% recovery. Next, we engineered Pseudomonas putida KT2440 to utilize acetamide as the sole carbon and nitrogen source for growth through the constitutive expression of genes encoding amidase enzymes, including a native amidase (PP_0613) shown to be active on C2–C4 amides. Heterologous chromosomal expression of amiE, encoding the amidase from P. aeruginosa, was found to be superior to PP_0613 constitutive expression in genome integrated strains. Prior engineering to enable TPA conversion to β-ketoadipate pathway intermediate protocatechuate was leveraged and combined with deletion of pcaD to produce muconolactone as a product. Finally, a stacked strain engineered for conversion of acetamide, TPA, and DCAs was evaluated on the reaction product from autoxidation of mixed post-consumer nylon and PET fibers without any supplemental nitrogen, achieving quantitative yields in the presence of supplemental carbon.

Graphical abstract: Mixed polyamide and polyester upcycling via chemical autoxidation and engineered Pseudomonas putida

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Aug 2025
Accepted
09 Sep 2025
First published
19 Sep 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

React. Chem. Eng., 2025, Advance Article

Mixed polyamide and polyester upcycling via chemical autoxidation and engineered Pseudomonas putida

R. Eaglesfield, B. L. Frey, C. W. Lahive, A. A. Cuthbertson, E. Kuatsjah, K. J. Ramirez, Y. Avina, H. Alt, N. Banakis, K. M. Knauer, G. T. Beckham and A. Z. Werner, React. Chem. Eng., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5RE00351B

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