| Literature DB >> 19774110 |
Mehdi Dashtban1, Heidi Schraft, Wensheng Qin.
Abstract
The development of alternative energy technology is critically important because of the rising prices of crude oil, security issues regarding the oil supply, and environmental issues such as global warming and air pollution. Bioconversion of biomass has significant advantages over other alternative energy strategies because biomass is the most abundant and also the most renewable biomaterial on our planet. Bioconversion of lignocellulosic residues is initiated primarily by microorganisms such as fungi and bacteria which are capable of degrading lignocellulolytic materials. Fungi such as Trichoderma reesei and Aspergillus niger produce large amounts of extracellular cellulolytic enzymes, whereas bacterial and a few anaerobic fungal strains mostly produce cellulolytic enzymes in a complex called cellulosome, which is associated with the cell wall. In filamentous fungi, cellulolytic enzymes including endoglucanases, cellobiohydrolases (exoglucanases) and beta-glucosidases work efficiently on cellulolytic residues in a synergistic manner. In addition to cellulolytic/hemicellulolytic activities, higher fungi such as basidiomycetes (e.g. Phanerochaete chrysosporium) have unique oxidative systems which together with ligninolytic enzymes are responsible for lignocellulose degradation. This review gives an overview of different fungal lignocellulolytic enzymatic systems including extracellular and cellulosome-associated in aerobic and anaerobic fungi, respectively. In addition, oxidative lignocellulose-degradation mechanisms of higher fungi are discussed. Moreover, this paper reviews the current status of the technology for bioconversion of biomass by fungi, with focus on mutagenesis, co-culturing and heterologous gene expression attempts to improve fungal lignocellulolytic activities to create robust fungal strains.Entities:
Keywords: Bioconversion; Biomass; Cellulases; Cellulosome; Fungi; Lignocellulose
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19774110 PMCID: PMC2748470 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.5.578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Some of the lignocellulosic residues produced by different industries and potential for ethanol production
| Lignocellulosic Wastes | Annual production | Potential contribution to ethanol production (billion litre/year) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| World Agricultural Wastes1 | Trillion grams/year (Tg/y) | ||
| Corn stover | 203.62 | 58.6 | |
| Barley straw | 58.45 | 18.1 | |
| Oat straw | 10.62 | 2.78 | |
| Rice straw | 731.34 | 204.6 | |
| Wheat straw | 354.35 | 103.8 | |
| Sorghum straw | 10.32 | 2.79 | |
| Bagasse | 180.73 | 51.3 | |
| Subtotal | 1549.42 | 442.0 | |
| Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) | Million metric tons (million MT) | ||
| USA (2001) | 208 | 13.7 2 | |
| China (1998) | 127 | 8.3 3 | |
| Canada (2002) | 30.5 | 2 4 | |
| Animal Wastes5 | |||
| In Canada (2001) | 177.5 | ||
| In USA (1995) | 160 |
1 Average values from 1997 to 2001 have been used to calculate world agricultural waste production 12. 2-4Potential contribution of MSW in USA, China and Canada in 2001, 1998 and 2002 respectively, assuming a conservative yield of 66 L of ethanol/MT of MSW 13-15. 5The fiber content (including cellulose and hemicellulose) of cattle manure, for example, is 52.6% (dry biomass basis). These sugars can be hydrolyzed and fermented to produce ethanol but the utilization of animal manures is more complicated due to its high protein content 16,17.
Examples of different fungi producing different lignocellulolytic enzymes and their substrates.
| Group | Fungal strain | Enzymes | Substrate | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aerobic fungi (Extracellular lignocellulolytic enzymes) | Ascomycetes | Cellulases (CMCase, CBH, BGL), Hemicellulase (xylanase) | Wheat straw | ||
| Cellulases (CMCase, CBH), β-1,3-glucanases | Wheat bran, wheat straw | ||||
| Cellulases, Xylanases | Sugar cane bagasse | ||||
| Cellulases (CMCase, CBH), Laccase | Forest litter of | ||||
| Basidiomycetes | Cellulases (CMCase, CBH, BGL), CDH, LiP, MnP, Hemicellulase (xylanases) | Red oak, grape seeds, barley bran, woodchips | |||
| Cellulases (CMCase, CBH, BGL) | Microcrystalline cellulose | ||||
| Anaerobic rumen fungi (Chytridiomycetes) (Cell-wall associated lignocellulolytic enzymes, “cellulosome”) | Cellulase (CMCase), Hemicellulase (xylanase) | Orchard grass hay | |||
| Cellulases, Hemicellulases (xylanase, β-D-xylosidase) | Maize stem | ||||
| Cellulases, Xylanases | Grass silage | ||||
| Cellulases, Hemicellulase (xylanase, β-galactosidase) | Cotton fiber, wheat straw | ||||
| Cellulase (CMCase, CBH, β-glucosidase), Hemicellulases (xylanase, mannanases) | Wheat straw | ||||
| Cellulases (CMCase, CBH, β-glucosidase) Hemicellulases (xylanase, mannanases) | Maize stem |
CMCase: Carboxymethylcellulases (endoglucanase), CBH: Cellobiohydrolases, BGL: β-glucosidases, CDH: Cellobiose dehydrogenase, MnP: Manganese peroxidises, LiP: Lignin peroxidises.
Overview of the three groups of fungal cellulolytic enzymes and their main features.
| Optimum Substrate | Molecular mass (kDa) | GH family: corresponding structural fold | Optimum temperature (°C) | pH optimum | Glyco-sylation | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cellulose (amorphous regions) | Monomeric (22-45) | 50-70 | Mostly 4-5 | None or very low | |||
| Cellulose (crystalline regions) | Monomeric (50-65) | 37-60 | Mostly 4-5 | None or very low | |||
| Cellobiose, cellodextrins | Monomeric, dimeric, trimeric (35-450) | 45-75 | Vary1 | Usually very high | |||
1pH optima of BGLs vary based on the enzyme localization.
Different mechanisms involved in production of •OH in different fungi
| Fungi | Mechanisms | Other enzymes involved/their function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| White-rot fungi (e.g. | CDH catalyzed reaction | Oxalate decarboxylase/regulation of oxalate concentration | |
| Brown and white-rot fungi (e.g. | Quinone redox cycling | Benzoquinone reductases, CDH, sugar dehydrogenases/convert quinones to hydroquinones | |
| Brown and white-rot fungi (e.g. | Glycopeptides-catalyzed Fenton reaction | Cell wall-associated reductase/reduction of glycopeptides |
Figure 1Schematic picture for the conversion of lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol, including the major steps. Hydrolysis and fermentation can be performed separately (SHF, indicated by broken arrows) or as simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF). In consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) however, all bioconversion steps are minimized to one step in a single reactor using one or more microorganisms. Different techniques such as mutagenesis, co-culturing and heterologous gene expression have been used to improve sugars utilization of the microbial biocatalyst as well as activity and/or stability of hydrolytic fungal-derived enzymes in order to improve the overall yields. For reduction of production cost, ethanol production can be integrated with a combined heat and power plant using lignin.
Some methods which have been used to improve fungal lignocellulolytic activity or stability.
| Methods | Fungal strain | Enzyme | Altered feature | Technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mutagenesis | Cellulases | Activity | UV treatment followed by 2 rounds of NTG treatment | ||
| β-glucosidase | Activity | 2 rounds of NTG treatment followed by UV treatment | |||
| Cellulases and xylanases | Activity | Four cycles of UV mutagenesis followed by two-stage fermentation process | |||
| Thermophilic endo-1,4-β-xylanase (XynII) | pH stability (alkalinity), Thermostability | SDM (using PCR and synthetic oligonucleotide primers) (N97R+F93W+H144K) | |||
| Endo-β-1,4-glucanase II | Catalytic efficiency, pH optimum | Saturation mutagenesis followed by random mutagenesis and two rounds of DNA shuffling | |||
| Endo-1,4-β-xylanases II (XynII) | Thermostability | PCR and synthetic oligonucleotide primers (Engineering a disulfide bridge at N-terminal region) | |||
| Co-culturing | β-glucosidase | Activity | Fed-batch fermentor on a Cellulose-Yeast extract medium | ||
| β-glucosidase | Activity | Shake flask culture | |||
| β-glucosidase | Activity | Solid state fermentation using pretreated sugarcane bagasse | |||
| Cellulases, xylanases | Activity | Mixed culture medium (M3) supplemented with trace metal & vitamin solutions | |||
| Cellulases, hemicellulases | Activity | Solid state fermentation using ammonia-treated bagasse | |||
| Heterologous gene expression | Thermostable β-glucosidase ( | Activity | Heterologous gene expression using | ||
| Cellobiohydrolase (I & II) | Activity | Overexpression using | |||
| Endoglucanase & cellobiohydrolase | Bi-functional endo- & exo-acting cellulase | Chimeric protein, expressed in | |||
| Cel12 A | Thermostability | Mutation followed by heterologous expression in |
SDM: site-directed mutagenesis