For the lawyer, district attorney, and judge in New York City, see
John E. McGeehan.
John McGeehan is a British research scientist and professor of structural biology. He was director of the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) at the
University of Portsmouth until 2022 and led a research team on enzyme engineering.
In 2018, McGeehan co-led an international team of scientists who characterized and engineered an enzyme with the ability to breakdown crystalline
polyethylene terephthalate (PET), the primary material used in the manufacture of single-use plastic bottles, in some clothing, and in carpets.[1][2][3] The bacteria that produces this enzyme, Ideonella sakaiensis, was originally discovered and isolated in a recycling plant by a Japanese research group in 2016.[4][5]
Plastics such as PET, while incredibly versatile, are resistant to natural breakdown and are now an increasing source of pollution in the environment.[10] The research team aims to develop improved enzymes to breakdown plastics into their original building blocks so they can be reused as part of a circular plastics economy.[7]
The initial research story was covered widely in the press in 2018 (The Times,[11] The Guardian,[12] and The Economist[13]), television media (BBC,[14] ITV,[15] CNN,[16] CBS,[17] Al Jazeera,[18] and HBO[19]), and by funding organisations, including the BBSRC[20] and UKRI.[21]
The team has continued to make further improvements to enzymes that can break down plastics through the characterisation of natural bacterial systems followed by laboratory protein engineering.[22] Their latest work employs the use of
AlphaFold through a collaboration with
DeepMind (
video) to uncover the 3D structures of alternative
PETase enzymes.
Following his PhD in Glasgow, McGeehan worked in the Structural Biology Laboratories at the
University of York before joining Professor
Geoff Kneales' group at the University of Portsmouth in 2000, where he worked for five years on DNA-binding proteins.[23] In 2005, he obtained a postdoctoral fellowship with the
European Molecular Biology Laboratory,
Grenoble, France, in
Raimond Ravelli's group researching macromolecular crystallography and spectroscopy.[23]
In 2007, he returned to the University of Portsmouth, was awarded a Readership in 2012, and full professorship in 2016.[23]
In 2019, McGeehan became the founding director of the Centre for Enzyme Innovation (CEI) at the
University of Portsmouth where he led a research team on enzyme engineering.[24] By January 2023, he had left Portsmouth and become the Secretary General of The World Plastics Association in Monaco.[25][26]
Research
McGeehan has interests in enzymes involved in the breakdown and valorization of biomass such as cellulose[27] and lignin,[28] and the discovery and engineering of enzymes for the breakdown of synthetic polymers such as plastics.