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.