Litcius/Paper detail

Colorimetric High-Throughput Screening Assay to Engineer Fungal Peroxygenases for the Degradation of Thermoset Composite Epoxy Resins

Mikel Dolz, Ivan Mateljak, Daniel Méndez‐Sánchez, Israel Sánchez‐Moreno, Patricia Gómez de Santos, Javier Viña‐Gonzalez, Miguel Alcalde

2022Frontiers in Catalysis12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

At present, the end-of-life management of thermoset composite epoxy resins is limited to incineration and landfill storage, highlighting the demand for the development of more sustainable measures. Due to their broad spectrum of C-H oxyfunctionalization reactions, fungal unspecific peroxygenases (UPOs) are becoming important biotechnological tools in organic synthesis while their potential use in biodegradation processes should not be underestimated. Here, we present a colorimetric screening assay aimed at engineering UPOs for the degradation of epoxy resins. We based our study on Hexflow ® RTM-6, a commercial epoxy resin used extensively in the aeronautics sector. UPO mutants from the short and long families were initially benchmarked by GC/MS to determine their potential N -dealkylation activity on N,N-bis(2-hydroxypropyl)- p -toluidine (NNBT), the main structural scaffold of Hexflow ® RTM-6. A reliable high-throughput colorimetric screening method was developed to quantify the lactaldehyde released by UPO attack on the tertiary amine of NNBT. Based on an evolved UPO from Psathyrella aberdarensis that was expressed by yeast, a small subset of mutant libraries with different mutational loadings was constructed and screened for NNBT N -dealkylation, thereby establishing a directed evolution platform as a vehicle to engineer UPO composite degrading variants.

Topics & Concepts

EpoxyThermosetting polymerComposite numberBiodegradationDegradation (telecommunications)ChemistryAlkylationMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryComputer scienceComposite materialCatalysisTelecommunicationsbiodegradable polymer synthesis and propertiesEnzyme-mediated dye degradationMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution