| Literature DB >> 30386430 |
Casey A Hooker1,2, Ethan T Hillman1,3, Jonathan C Overton1,2, Adrian Ortiz-Velez1, Makayla Schacht4, Abigail Hunnicutt1, Nathan S Mosier1,2, Kevin V Solomon1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plant biomass is an abundant but underused feedstock for bioenergy production due to its complex and variable composition, which resists breakdown into fermentable sugars. These feedstocks, however, are routinely degraded by many uncommercialized microbes such as anaerobic gut fungi. These gut fungi express a broad range of carbohydrate active enzymes and are native to the digestive tracts of ruminants and hindgut fermenters. In this study, we examine gut fungal performance on these substrates as a function of composition, and the ability of this isolate to degrade inhibitory high syringyl lignin-containing forestry residues.Entities:
Keywords: Anaerobic fungi; Carbohydrate active enzymes; Lignin; Lignocellulose; Neocallimastigomycota; Poplar
Year: 2018 PMID: 30386430 PMCID: PMC6203967 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-018-1292-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 3Piromyces sp. UH3-1 grows on diverse feedstocks: a growth of UH3-1 on soluble substrates leads to colony formation on the walls of the tubes (arrows indicating colony formation). Fungal cultures growing on lignocellulosic substrates float up during fermentation. b A representative growth curve of UH3-1 on corn stover. c, d Piromyces sp. UH3-1 degrade and proliferate on a wide array of untreated agricultural wastes, bioenergy feedstocks, and forestry wastes. All accumulated pressures are normalized to glucose. Asterisks denote statistically significant differences in specific growth rate relative to glucose (p < 0.05, unpaired t test)
Fig. 5Anaerobic fungal growth and sugar degradation is robust against lignin composition with optimal enzyme expression: a relative growth rates of UH3-1 on genetically modified lines of poplar relative to wild-type INRA 717 (64% S-lignin), (p = 0.0317, R2 = 0.1715). b Relative fungal biomass accumulations of UH3-1 on genetically modified lines of poplar relative to wild-type INRA 717 (p = 0.0011, R2 = 0.2991). c Minimum hydrolysis percentages on three of the lines of poplar [17, 19]. d The carbohydrate binding portion of the fungal secretome shows changes in response to S-lignin composition (green arrows)
Fig. 1The life cycle of Piromyces sp. UH3-1: A individual mature sporangia on corn stover (left) displaying ovoid structure. B Roll tube used to isolate individual axenic cultures of anaerobic fungi. C A uniflagellated zoospore of UH3-1 imaged after zoospore death. D Multiple sporangia, demonstrating the predominantly spherical to ovoid structure; arrows indicate individual sporangia in rhizomycelial network. E DAPI stain indicating the monocentric nature as zoosporatic nuclei are contained with the sporangia
Fig. 2Phylogenetic analyses place our isolate within the genus Piromyces: a collapsed ITS1 phylogenetic tree and b collapsed LSU phylogenetic tree. Fully expanded phylogenetic trees displaying the Genbank accession numbers are available (Additional file 1: Figure S2, S3). Significant bootstrap values from 1000 iterations are indicated to the left of each branch
Fig. 4Piromyces sp. UH3-1 secretes diverse CAZymes for degrading the polymers of lignocellulose: a a pectin zymogram shows strong pectinolytic activity for UH3-1 at the top of the gel (teal arrow), while Aspergillus (Viscozyme, positive control) shows multiple bands having pectinolytic activity (pink arrows). b A carboxy methyl cellulose zymogram shows distinct cellulolytic activity for multiple proteins of UH3-1 (teal arrows), while Aspergillus (Viscozyme, positive control) shows high cellulolytic activity (pink arrow). Controls and experimental samples were loaded with the same total protein mass as measured by a Bradford assay