Computational and Experimental Enzyme Engineering for New Polymers
Acronym
COMENZE
Description of the granted funding
Polymeric materials are ubiquitous in our daily lives but they have a predominantly fossil origin, with low degradability at their end-of-
life. Transitioning to a circular polymer economy requires a rethinking of the entire value chain, from the raw materials, tools, and processes used to polymer design degradation and recycling. Enzymes are eco-friendly and sustainable tools that tackle many industrial applications. However, biocatalysis in the polymer field remains mostly unexplored due to i) enzymes’ high cost and low stability under reaction conditions, ii) enzymes’ inefficiency in converting bio-based monomers into cost-effective building blocks, and iii) lack of knowledge in key enzyme-polymer interactions that can control the final polymer performance and degradability features. Computational tools have shown immense power to revolutionize the field of enzyme engineering in a time and cost effective way. However, there is currently a clear lack of researchers combining computational and experimental skills, capable of determining future directions for the optimization of biocatalytic processes for the sustainable molecular design of polymers.
To foster the transition to a bio-based polymer industry, COMENZE aims to develop enzymatic strategies for improving the eco-design and development of future sustainable polymers. This will be achieved by combining cutting-edge computational and experimental approaches for enzyme discovery and engineering through in-silico modeling, simulation, and translation of results into wet labs to validate enzymatic reactions. COMENZE will train the next generation of researchers by equipping 10 DCs with the skills to revolutionize the polymer circularity by delivering new optimized enzymes and bioprocesses, newly identified bio-based building blocks, and functionalized polymers with innovative bio-upcycling and biodegradation end-of-life options.
Show moreStarting year
2025
End year
2029
Granted funding
METGEN OY
Participant
Aachen Proteineers GmbH (DE)
Participant
GECCO BIOTECH BV (NL)
274 370.4 €
Participant
ZYMVOL BIOMODELING SL (ES)
251 971.2 €
Participant
UNIVERSIDADE NOVA DE LISBOA (PT)
243 403.2 €
Coordinator
DWI LEIBNIZ-INSTITUT FUR INTERAKTIVE MATERIALIEN EV (DE)
260 539.2 €
Participant
BASF SE (DE)
260 539.2 €
Participant
TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITAET BRAUNSCHWEIG (DE)
260 539.2 €
Participant
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI PAVIA (IT)
259 437.6 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAT DE GIRONA (ES)
251 971.2 €
Participant
POLITECHNIKA SLASKA (PL)
226 512 €
Participant
RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT GRONINGEN (NL)
274 370.4 €
Participant
KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN (BE)
Participant
Amount granted
2 563 654 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
HORIZON TMA MSCA Doctoral Networks
Framework programme
Horizon Europe (HORIZON)
Call
Programme part
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) (11677Topic
MSCA Doctoral Networks 2023 (HORIZON-MSCA-2023-DN-01-01Call ID
HORIZON-MSCA-2023-DN-01 Other information
Funding decision number
101169327
Identified topics
bio-based materials, packaging, plastics