From PET Bottles to Sweet Delicacies

Authors

  • Petr Holý Prague, Czech Republic
  • Eva Benešová Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague, Czech Republic

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54779/chl20220061

Keywords:

vanillin, terephthalic acid, food industry, plastics, recycling

Abstract

The treatment of waste PET bottles has become a pressing global issue over the last few decades, and many scientific teams are currently working on solutions to it. There are many different approaches of how to solve this problem. The present article outlines the possibility to process terephthalic acid, which is the hydrolysis product of polyethylene terephthalate, into vanillin, a compound widely used in the food industry. The work of British scientists who have succeeded in using genetic modification to produce a strain of E. coli RARE_pVanX capable of processing polyethylene terephthalate hydrolysates to the desired vanillin is presented in a broader context.

Published

2022-01-15

How to Cite

Holý, P., & Benešová, E. (2022). From PET Bottles to Sweet Delicacies. Chemické Listy, 116(1), 61–64. https://doi.org/10.54779/chl20220061

Issue

Section

Bulletin