Enzymatic deconstruction of polyester textiles
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Portsmouth
Department Name: Sch of Biological Sciences
Abstract
Novel means of recycling end-of-life polyesters are required if we are to convert the current, linear textile economy into a circular one with a reduced reliance on fossil-based feedstocks.
Polyesters are a type of polymer, chains of building blocks linked together by chemical bonds; in this case, they are ester bonds. Natural polymers are commonplace in all kingdoms of life, and for every natural polymer, there exists a natural enzyme that can deconstruct it back into its constituent building blocks. These deconstructing enzymes give circularity to life; the building blocks are reused with nothing going to waste.
This project will develop enzyme-based technology for the breakdown of waste polyester textiles into their chemical building blocks for subsequent reuse in a circular bioeconomy. We will develop robust enzymes that can deconstruct the most commonly-used polyester polyethylene terephthalate (PET) in waste textiles, tolerating the challenges that this feedstock poses, namely its toughness and the presence of dyes and additives. Our research will establish the feasibility of using enzymes to deconstruct the PET in waste textiles into a soup of simple building blocks for conversion back into new polyesters, thus circularising the existing linear economy, and reducing the need to produce virgin PET from fossil-fuel based chemicals.
Current schemes for enzymatic recycling of polyesters - predominantly beverage bottles and food packaging - rely upon energy-intensive pre-treatment regimes to reduce the toughness of the polymer in order for it to be deconstructed by the current best-performing enzymes. Polyester textiles present further potential challenges for enzymatic deconstruction in that they contain dyes and other additives that may impede the activity of enzymes. Ultimately, industry's adoption of enzyme-based technology for deconstruction of polyester textiles will require thorough assessments of the technology, including proof-of-concept studies in laboratory-scale bioreactors that mimic the proposed industrial application.
Our project will address these challenges in three related work packages, at each point guided by input from an impact advisory group. We will use a combined approach of optimising both enzyme performance and green, physicochemical textile pre-treatment to overcome the resistance of tough polyesters to enzymatic deconstruction. We will test the compatibility of our engineered enzymes with additives, dyes and solvents to select those enzymes that are best suited to polyester textile deconstruction. We will apply our most robust enzymes to appropriately pretreated waste polyester textiles in laboratory-scale bioreactors to evaluate the potential and limitations of scaling up the enzymatic deconstruction technology. Throughout, we will engage with the global research community through the BOTTLE consortium and through Biomimicry Institutes' Design for Decomposition project. We will also work to build synergy with the requirements of UK businesses in the textiles value chain through our partnership with Endura, a UK cycling clothing brand.
At the end of the project, we will hold workshops with our project partners and other industrial stakeholders, to showcase the outcomes from the above study and to inform the development of a technology development roadmap for future application of enzymatic polyester textile deconstruction.
Polyesters are a type of polymer, chains of building blocks linked together by chemical bonds; in this case, they are ester bonds. Natural polymers are commonplace in all kingdoms of life, and for every natural polymer, there exists a natural enzyme that can deconstruct it back into its constituent building blocks. These deconstructing enzymes give circularity to life; the building blocks are reused with nothing going to waste.
This project will develop enzyme-based technology for the breakdown of waste polyester textiles into their chemical building blocks for subsequent reuse in a circular bioeconomy. We will develop robust enzymes that can deconstruct the most commonly-used polyester polyethylene terephthalate (PET) in waste textiles, tolerating the challenges that this feedstock poses, namely its toughness and the presence of dyes and additives. Our research will establish the feasibility of using enzymes to deconstruct the PET in waste textiles into a soup of simple building blocks for conversion back into new polyesters, thus circularising the existing linear economy, and reducing the need to produce virgin PET from fossil-fuel based chemicals.
Current schemes for enzymatic recycling of polyesters - predominantly beverage bottles and food packaging - rely upon energy-intensive pre-treatment regimes to reduce the toughness of the polymer in order for it to be deconstructed by the current best-performing enzymes. Polyester textiles present further potential challenges for enzymatic deconstruction in that they contain dyes and other additives that may impede the activity of enzymes. Ultimately, industry's adoption of enzyme-based technology for deconstruction of polyester textiles will require thorough assessments of the technology, including proof-of-concept studies in laboratory-scale bioreactors that mimic the proposed industrial application.
Our project will address these challenges in three related work packages, at each point guided by input from an impact advisory group. We will use a combined approach of optimising both enzyme performance and green, physicochemical textile pre-treatment to overcome the resistance of tough polyesters to enzymatic deconstruction. We will test the compatibility of our engineered enzymes with additives, dyes and solvents to select those enzymes that are best suited to polyester textile deconstruction. We will apply our most robust enzymes to appropriately pretreated waste polyester textiles in laboratory-scale bioreactors to evaluate the potential and limitations of scaling up the enzymatic deconstruction technology. Throughout, we will engage with the global research community through the BOTTLE consortium and through Biomimicry Institutes' Design for Decomposition project. We will also work to build synergy with the requirements of UK businesses in the textiles value chain through our partnership with Endura, a UK cycling clothing brand.
At the end of the project, we will hold workshops with our project partners and other industrial stakeholders, to showcase the outcomes from the above study and to inform the development of a technology development roadmap for future application of enzymatic polyester textile deconstruction.
Technical Summary
Enzymes hold great promise for the low-energy deconstruction and reuse of waste polymers such as the polyester polyethylene terephthalate (PET) which is commonplace in synthetic fabrics. However, applying enzymes to the deconstruction of waste PET in textiles may be hampered by the material's challenging characteristics: its crystallinity (the degree of structural order in the polymer), and the presence of dyes and additives both of which could inhibit the enzyme activity. The current approach to overcome the PET crystallinity problem is to amorphise it by melting and extrusion quenching, an energy intensive pretreatment method with a high carbon footprint. Alternative approaches are needed if the enzymatic deconstruction of polyester textiles is to achieve its low-carbon potential.
At the Centre for Enzyme Innovation, our researchers will overcome the crystallinity problem using a dual approach of: (a) using structure-guided engineering to generate more robust variants of a newly discovered cutinase enzyme (SfCut) that has a natural tolerance to higher crystallinity PET; and (b) developing a green, chemical pretreatment process, using dissolution-reprecipitation, to reduce the PET crystallinity to a level more compatible with enzymatic deconstruction. We will establish which commonly-used polyester dyes and additives are compatible with our SfCut variants by measuring the enzyme's thermostability (DSC), their intrinsic catalytic activity (ITC), and their ability to produce PET deconstruction products (HPLC), in the presence of these compounds. Finally, we will test the thermostable, dye/additive-resistant SfCut variants for their ability to deconstruct polyester textiles at the laboratory scale (0.2-1L) in pH-controlled bioreactors. Together with comprehensive technoeconomic and life cycle assessments, these proof-of-concept studies will inform the feasibility of applying enzymatic deconstruction of polyester textiles in industry.
At the Centre for Enzyme Innovation, our researchers will overcome the crystallinity problem using a dual approach of: (a) using structure-guided engineering to generate more robust variants of a newly discovered cutinase enzyme (SfCut) that has a natural tolerance to higher crystallinity PET; and (b) developing a green, chemical pretreatment process, using dissolution-reprecipitation, to reduce the PET crystallinity to a level more compatible with enzymatic deconstruction. We will establish which commonly-used polyester dyes and additives are compatible with our SfCut variants by measuring the enzyme's thermostability (DSC), their intrinsic catalytic activity (ITC), and their ability to produce PET deconstruction products (HPLC), in the presence of these compounds. Finally, we will test the thermostable, dye/additive-resistant SfCut variants for their ability to deconstruct polyester textiles at the laboratory scale (0.2-1L) in pH-controlled bioreactors. Together with comprehensive technoeconomic and life cycle assessments, these proof-of-concept studies will inform the feasibility of applying enzymatic deconstruction of polyester textiles in industry.
Organisations
- University of Portsmouth (Lead Research Organisation)
- UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH (Collaboration)
- University College London (Collaboration)
- BANGOR UNIVERSITY (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (Collaboration)
- IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON (Collaboration)
- Biomimicry Institute (Project Partner)
- Endura Ltd (Project Partner)
Publications

Groseclose T
(2024)
A High-Throughput Screening Platform for Engineering Poly(ethylene Terephthalate) Hydrolases
in ACS Catalysis
Description | Engineering enzymes for the deconstruction of waste polyester textiles (SoCoBio DTP PhD studentship) |
Amount | £1 (GBP) |
Funding ID | 2893469 |
Organisation | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 09/2023 |
End | 09/2027 |
Description | Grant Title: Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub |
Amount | £11,162,824 (GBP) |
Funding ID | BB/Y007972/1 |
Organisation | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 02/2024 |
End | 02/2029 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | Bangor University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | Imperial College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | University College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | University of Cambridge |
Department | Cambridge Neuroscience |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | University of Edinburgh |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | UKRI Engineering Biology Mission Hub "Preventing Plastic Pollution through Engineering Biology (P3EB)" |
Organisation | University of Manchester |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | The team at the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) in Portsmouth are leading the Preventing Plastic Pollution with Engineering Biology (P3EB) Mission Hub, which also includes Bangor University, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, University of Manchester, and University College London. The P3EB Mission Hub will receive £11.2 million from the "UKRI Technology Missions Fund" over the next 5 years, with £3.5 million supporting the CEI in Portsmouth. The P3EB Mission Hub is a pioneering initiative aimed at transforming end-of-life plastic waste using cutting-edge engineering biology technologies. Working in partnership, the CEI will use its transformative enzyme technology to impart value into plastic waste (including synthetic textiles), incentivising its recovery and retention, and so reducing the amount destined for landfill, for incineration, or being discarded into our environment. |
Collaborator Contribution | Our collaborating partners bring a wide range of extertise to the P3EB Mission Hub, including environmental biotechnology (Bangor), microbial metabolic engineering (Edinburgh and Imperial), ultra high throughput screening (Cambridge), policy engagement (Manchester) and public engagement (UCL). |
Impact | The P3EB Mission Hub was established in February 2024, so no outputs have been generated as yet. |
Start Year | 2023 |
Description | Grand Challenges talk at the Oxford Museum of Natural History |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | I delivered one of four short talks on the potential for applying biological solutions to tackling plastic pollution. The intention was to spark interest in the research amongst the general public and to stimulate conscious decision making about sustainable living practices. Judging by the engaging Q&A session afterwards, the event was a success. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
Description | Presentation at the Lichfield Science and Engineering Society |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | I delivered a 45-minute public lecture on the potential of enzymes as a solution to the plastics pollution crisis at the Lichfield Garrick Theatre. A highly engaged Q&A followed which ran well over the allocated time due to the enthusiasm of the audience. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://www.lses.org.uk/enzyme-eating-plastics/ |
Description | Reuters media interview for regional, national and international broadcast |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
Results and Impact | Prof Andy Pickford and Dr Victoria Bemmer provided lab-based interviews to explain and demonstrate the science behind enzymes that can deconstruct synthetic textiles. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwSwxZL_eNs&ab_channel=TheStraitsTimes |