| Literature DB >> 30202438 |
Xiaoyu Liang1,2, Jason M Whitham2,3, Evert K Holwerda1,2, Xiongjun Shao1,2, Liang Tian1,2, Yu-Wei Wu4, Vincent Lombard5,6, Bernard Henrissat5,6,7, Dawn M Klingeman2,3, Zamin K Yang3, Mircea Podar3, Tom L Richard8, James G Elkins2,3, Steven D Brown2,3,9, Lee R Lynd1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anaerobic fermentation of lignocellulose occurs in both natural and managed environments, and is an essential part of the carbon cycle as well as a promising route to sustainable production of fuels and chemicals. Lignocellulose solubilization by mixed microbiomes is important in these contexts.Entities:
Keywords: Anaerobic; Clostridium clariflavum; Lignocellulose; Metagenomics; Methanogenic; Microbial communities; Solubilization; Thermophilic
Year: 2018 PMID: 30202438 PMCID: PMC6126044 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-018-1238-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Moisture level, COD, carbohydrate and ash content of the milled switchgrass (Results are expressed as mean ± SD)
| Parameters | Switchgrass value |
|---|---|
| Moisture | 6.05% ± 0.3% |
| Total COD (g/g switchgrass) | 1.22 ± 0.01 |
| Glucose | 30.6% ± 1.4% |
| Xylose | 22.9% ± 1.0% |
| Arabinose | 4.07% ± 0.2% |
| Ash | 5.92% ± 0.05% |
The COD, carbohydrate and ash content values are for switchgrass inclusive of 6.05% moisture
Fig. 1Microbiome performance shown by time-course measurements. a Biogas production rate (mL/day) vs. time. b Volatile fatty acids (VFA) concentration (g/L) and pH vs. time. c Fractional carbohydrate solubilization vs. time. R1 was the control reactor and maintained at residence time (RT) = 20 days throughout. R2 and R3 had decreasing RTs (20 days, 10 days, 5 days and 3.3 days) with each RT’s period indicated by dashed black lines. Biogas production was recorded once per sampling interval (1/10th RT) and normalized to daily rate assuming constant rate during per interval. pH data was automatically acquired once per 5 min and subsampled to 3–4 data points per day to be shown in figure. FCS data were calculated based on total carbohydrates loaded and total residual carbohydrate in each sample. Acid concentration and FCS results are expressed as mean ± SD
Fig. 3Rate of total carbohydrate solubilization r (g solubilized carbohydrate/L/day) vs. concentration of unutilized carbohydrate C (g remaining carbohydrate/L). Mean of steady-state solubilization data of each residence time (RT) of R2 and R3 (shown in Additional file 4: Table S3) was used to calculate C and r. Linear regression was performed and fitting curve was shown as solid black line in the figure
Fig. 2Comparative solubilization of xylan and glucan. Data are for the same samples reported in Fig. 1. Best fit linear regression curve is shown as solid black line
Fig. 4Relative abundance of the bacterial and archaeal partial 16S rDNA genes with phylum (a) and taxon level resolution as low as genus (b) in switchgrass digesters. Fermentation periods are divided by days (D) and residence time (R). The left and right columns are the inoculum (I) and substrate (S) profiles. Only taxa with average relative abundances of greater than 1% are indicated in the legend of b. Steady state with respect to solubilization and gas composition was in general observed at times following change of the feed rate ≥ 3 residence times as described elsewhere. Taxonomic profiles are presented both before and after this 3 residence time threshold. The number of taxonomic profiles made after this threshold for reactors R2 and R3, corresponding to the data to the right for each RT, were as follows: 3 for RT = 20 days, 2 for RT = 10 days, 3 for RT = 5 days, 1 for RT = 3.3 days
Fig. 5Switchgrass digester microbial community with CAZymes profiles and key metabolic pathways. Each microbe listed was found in at least four of fifteen metagenome samples taken from three reactors operating at residence times (RT) of 20, 10, 5, and 3.3 days. Taxonomy was assigned using CheckM; species were manually assigned if its average nucleotide identity was greater than 95% the type strain genome. Microbes were sorted by average relative abundance at the 3.3-day RT. Average relative abundance was not determined (ND) for microbes whose metagenome bins were less than 40% complete or had greater than 20% contamination. Darker green colors indicate higher counts of CAZyme markers. Marker sets used to evaluate metabolic potential were taken from MetaCyc.org and Worm et al. [72]. Complete marker sets are indicated by green pie graphs, while incomplete marker sets with greater than 70% completeness are indicated by red and blue pie graphs, where red indicates the percentage of missing markers