Enzymatic Degradation of Crystalline Polyethylene Terephthalate: Challenges, Strategies, and Perspectives Towards Sustainable Recycling
Norbert Graefe, Jonas Gunkel, Christian Sonnendecker, Wolfgang Zimmermann, Georg KünzePolyethylene terephthalate (PET) is one of the most widely used plastics for single-use applications, with annual global production exceeding 80 Mt. Enzymatic degradation of PET has emerged as a promising and sustainable alternative to conventional recycling methods, enabling the hydrolysis of PET into its constituent monomers. While amorphous PET can be efficiently degraded by polyester hydrolases identified from environmental sources, crystalline PET remains highly recalcitrant to enzymatic attack and constitutes a major bottleneck for the industrial implementation of enzymatic PET recycling. Although physicochemical pretreatments can increase PET amorphicity, these approaches often require substantial energy input, thereby compromising the overall sustainability of the process. Consequently, the development of enzymes capable of directly degrading crystalline PET has long been sought; however, currently engineered enzymes exhibit insufficient catalytic activity toward highly crystalline PET owing to multiple factors, including limited substrate surface accessibility, highly ordered polymer morphology, incompatible binding-pocket geometries, restricted chain mobility, and unfavorable conformational energetics at the polymer–enzyme interface. This review aims to evaluate the factors limiting the enzymatic degradation of crystalline PET and to assess current strategies for overcoming low degradation rates. Specifically, it examines advances in substrate modification as well as enzyme- and process-engineering approaches designed to improve the depolymerization of crystalline PET. The advantages and limitations of these strategies are critically compared and discussed, highlighting the remaining challenges and future directions toward efficient and scalable biocatalytic PET recycling.