| Literature DB >> 28360940 |
Christa Gunawan1,2, Saisi Xue1,2, Sivakumar Pattathil3,4,5, Leonardo da Costa Sousa1,2, Bruce E Dale1,2, Venkatesh Balan1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inefficient carbohydrate conversion has been an unsolved problem for various lignocellulosic biomass pretreatment technologies, including AFEX, dilute acid, and ionic liquid pretreatments. Previous work has shown 22% of total carbohydrates are typically unconverted, remaining as soluble or insoluble oligomers after hydrolysis (72 h) with excess commercial enzyme loading (20 mg enzymes/g biomass). Nearly one third (7 out of 22%) of these total unconverted carbohydrates are present in unhydrolyzed solid (UHS) residues. The presence of these unconverted carbohydrates leads to a considerable sugar yield loss, which negatively impacts the overall economics of the biorefinery. Current commercial enzyme cocktails are not effective to digest specific cross-linkages in plant cell wall glycans, especially some of those present in hemicelluloses and pectins. Thus, obtaining information about the most recalcitrant non-cellulosic glycan cross-linkages becomes a key study to rationally improve commercial enzyme cocktails, by supplementing the required enzyme activities for hydrolyzing those unconverted glycans.Entities:
Keywords: Carbohydrates linkages; Glycome profiling; High-solids loading enzymatic hydrolysis; Monoclonal antibody; Non-cellulosic polysaccharides; Recalcitrant cell-wall glycans; Unhydrolyzed solids
Year: 2017 PMID: 28360940 PMCID: PMC5372267 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-017-0757-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Process of characterizing the recalcitrant plant cell wall components in AFEX-CS
Fig. 2Composition of insoluble solids throughout enzymatic hydrolysis. Total height is normalized to the original amount of CS prior to hydrolysis. Composition includes all the insoluble structural carbohydrate, combined acid soluble and insoluble lignin, and ash
Fig. 3Mass balance for glucan (a), xylan (b), galactan (c), arabinan (d) throughout the course of hydrolysis. Monomeric and oligomeric sugars are measured in the liquid portion, while polymeric sugar is measured in the unhydrolyzed insoluble material. Total shaded area represents mass balance closure. The Y-axis has been scaled to 100% as the maximum at the beginning of hydrolysis
Fig. 4Glycome profiling of the cell wall extracts of untreated CS versus AFEX-CS. Here, A-B represents replicates of untreated or pretreated biomass prior to hydrolysis. Labels at the bottom of each panel indicate the reagents used for the sequential extractions of the cell wall. The amounts of sugars extracted are shown in the bar graphs above the panel. All the antibody groups used for the ELISA screening are shown on the right side of the heat map
Fig. 5AFEX increases the extractability (a) and digestibility (b) of CS. Here, a extractability is measured by total sugar intensity from all extracts from sequential extractions. On the top is the untreated CS and in the bottom is the AFEX-CS. The Y-axis shows the ratio of total sugar intensity versus g of biomass in thousands (*1000). All antibody groups used for ELISA screening are shown on the right side of the heat map. b Digestibility of untreated and AFEX-CS as total glucan-to-glucose yields after 24 and 168 h are shown in white and red bars, respectively. Total xylan-to-xylose yields after 24 and 168 h are shown in gray and blue bars, respectively. Error bars depict standard deviations of data from the mean values reported for assays conducted in triplicate
(Adapted from S. Pattathil et al. [31]; Fig. 7)
Fig. 6Glycome profiling of the cell wall extracts of AFEX-CS over the course of hydrolysis. Here, A-B represents replicates of extracts. AFEX A-B showed the composition of biomass at the beginning of hydrolysis. The other panels show the time points at which UHS were sampled (3A-B indicates 3 h time point). Labels at the bottom of each panel indicate the reagents used for the sequential extractions of the cell wall. The amounts of sugars extracted are shown in the bar graphs above the panel. All the antibody groups used for the ELISA screening are shown on the right side of the heat map
Antibodies-binding epitopes of the most recalcitrant glycans and their cross-linkage patterns. Linkages were depicted with GlycoWorkBench developed in CCRC-UGA
Relative amount of sugar normalized to the amount of AFEX-CS present in each stage of hydrolysis present at each time point