| Literature DB >> 22672858 |
Muyang Li1, Cliff Foster, Shantanu Kelkar, Yunqiao Pu, Daniel Holmes, Arthur Ragauskas, Christopher M Saffron, David B Hodge.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For cellulosic biofuels processes, suitable characterization of the lignin remaining within the cell wall and correlation of quantified properties of lignin to cell wall polysaccharide enzymatic deconstruction is underrepresented in the literature. This is particularly true for grasses which represent a number of promising bioenergy feedstocks where quantification of grass lignins is particularly problematic due to the high fraction of p-hydroxycinnamates. The main focus of this work is to use grasses with a diverse range of lignin properties, and applying multiple lignin characterization platforms, attempt to correlate the differences in these lignin properties to the susceptibility to alkaline hydrogen peroxide (AHP) pretreatment and subsequent enzymatic deconstruction.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22672858 PMCID: PMC3443053 DOI: 10.1186/1754-6834-5-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Figure 1 Correlating Klason lignin content of the cell wall to glucan digestibility for all pretreatment conditions and biomass types.
Figure 2 Data for (A) Klason lignin and (B) glucan digestibility as a function of pretreatment condition.
Biomass-Derived Aromatic Monomers Quantified by Py-GC/MS
| Retention Time (min) | Major Mass Fragment (m/z) | Primary Origin | Secondary Origin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenol | 16.44 | 94 | H | |
| Guaiacol | 16.96 | 124 | G | FA |
| Creosol | 19.02 | 138 | G | FA |
| p-ethylguaiacol | 20.61 | 152 | G | FA |
| 4-vinylphenol | 21.45 | 120 | H | |
| 4-vinylguaiacol | 21.67 | 150 | FA | G |
| Syringol | 22.57 | 154 | S | - |
| (E)-isoeugenol | 23.98 | 164 | G | FA |
| Vanillin | 24.49 | 152 | G | FA |
| Acetoveratrone | 26.27 | 180 | G | FA |
| Methoxyeugenol | 28.24 | 194 | S | - |
Figure 3 Pools of aromatic pyrolysis products as a function of biomass source and pretreatment. The data were normalized to the mass of the original sample based on the quantified mass loss during pretreatment and provide an approximation of the relative abundance of the five pools of aromatics volatilized by pyrolysis.
Figure 4 Correlating pyrolytic yields of aromatics to Klason lignin. A comparison of all biomass types for all pretreatment conditions shows that the relationship between (A) aromatic pyrolytic yield versus Klason lignin and (B) the pyrolitic 4-vinylguaiacol as a proxy for cell wall ferulates versus Klason lignin with both normalized to the mass of the untreated sample to indicate the amount of material removed from the cell wall.
Figure 5 Estimated change in S/G ratio as a function of pretreatment condition using (A) analytical pyrolysis and (B) thioacidolysis.
Figure 6 Quantitative thioacidolysis yield for three of the three corn stovers either (A) untreated or (B) AHP pretreated at pH 11.5 12.5% HOloading.
Figure 7 Aromatic region of C- H HSQC spectra of (A) untreated and (B) AHP pretreated hybrid corn stover and (C) untreated and (D) AHP pretreated inbred bm3 corn stover in perdeuterated pyridinium chloride/DMSO-d.
Comparison of Methods for Estimation of S/G Ratios in the Residual Cell Wall
| Thioacidolysis-GC/MS | Py-GC/MS | 2D HSQC NMR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid corn stover, untreated | 0.88 ± 0.097 | 0.64 ± 0.019 | 1.31 |
| Hybrid corn stover, treated | 1.01 ± 0.044 | 0.68 ± 0.031 | 2.42 |
| Inbred bm3 stover untreated | 0.26 ± 0.061 | 0.20 ± 0.015 | 0.24 |
| Inbred bm3 stover, treated | 0.27 ± 0.059 | 0.23 ± 0.036 | 0.27 |