| Literature DB >> 15917601 |
Arwa Kurabi1, Alex Berlin, Neil Gilkes, Douglas Kilburn, Renata Bura, Jamie Robinson, Aleksandr Markov, Anton Skomarovsky, Aleksandr Gusakov, Oleg Okunev, Arkady Sinitsyn, David Gregg, Dan Xie, John Saddler.
Abstract
Softwood residues are the most abundant feedstock available for bioconversion in many northern countries. However, the high costs for delignification and enzymatic hydrolysis currently deter commercialization of softwood bioconversion processes. This study evaluates the abilities of two novel fungal preparations (MSUBC1 and MSUBC2) and two commercial cellulase preparations (TR1 and TR2) to hydrolyze cellulose in Douglas-firpretreated by steam explosion or ethanol organosolv process. MSUBC1 showed significantly better performance than the other preparations on both lignocellulosic substrates. In particular, MSUBC1 achieved >76% cellulose conversion for hydrolysis of steam-exploded Douglas-fir (approximately 44% lignin) after 72 h at low enzyme loading (10 filter paper units/g of cellulose) and without beta-glucosidase supplementation.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15917601 DOI: 10.1385/abab:121:1-3:0219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Biochem Biotechnol ISSN: 0273-2289 Impact factor: 2.926