| Literature DB >> 32226782 |
Lipeng Hou1, Dandan Ji1,2,3, Weifang Dong1, Lin Yuan1, Fengshan Zhang2, Yan Li4, Lihua Zang1.
Abstract
White-rot fungus is a common lignin-degrading fungus. However, compared with those of microorganisms that biodegrade lignin alone, synergistic systems of electro-Fenton processes and white-rot fungi are superior because of their high efficiency, mild conditions, and environmental friendliness. To investigate the details of lignin degradation by a synergistic system comprising electro-Fenton processes and white-rot fungi, lignin degradation was studied at different voltages with three lignin-degrading fungi (Phanerochaete chrysosporium, Lentinula edodes, and Trametes versicolor). The lignin degradation efficiency (82∼89%) of the synergistic systems at 4 V was higher than that of a control at 96 h post inoculation. Furthermore, the H2O2 produced and phenolic lignin converted in the system can significantly enhance the efficiency of ligninolytic enzymes, so a considerably increased enzyme activity was obtained by the synergistic action of electro-Fenton processes and white-rot fungi. 13C NMR spectroscopy revealed that aromatic structure units (103-162 ppm) were effectively degraded by the three fungi. This study shows that the combination of electro-Fenton processes and white-rot fungi treatment significantly improved the lignin degradation efficiency, which established a promising strategy for lignin degradation and valorization.Entities:
Keywords: electron-Fenton; lignin; lignin-degrading enzyme; synergistic system; white-rot fungi
Year: 2020 PMID: 32226782 PMCID: PMC7080661 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Primer pairs of the real-time PCR.
| Strain | Gene | Primer pairs |
| F: 5′-TTCTTCGTCGAGACTCAG-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-CTTGGACTGGTTGTTGAC-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-CTGTGAGTTACGGAATTGG-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-GGAGGAGGAGGAAGTAGA-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-GCACCACACCTTCTACAA-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-TCATCTTCTCACGGTTAGC-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-GACGCCTTTCCCTGCTCTTACTG-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-AGCAGCAGAACGAGCATATTCAGG-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-CAATCCTCCGCTGTTACA-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-TCGTTCGTGACCAAGATAA-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-CCAACCATTCGTTCCTCTA-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-GCAGTCAGCAATAGTAAGC-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-TTCACCGACAACATCACT-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-GACATAACAAGGGACACAAG-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-CACGACCTTTCCATCTTC-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-ATGCTTGCTGGTTAGTTG-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-GACACGCAGTTCTTCATC-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-CTGGTTGTTGACGAAGGA-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-GCTATCCTCCGCTATGAT-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-GCCGTTGATGAAGAAGTT-3′ | ||
| F: 5′-TATCCGTCGTGACCTCTA-3′ | ||
| R: 5′-CGATCTTGACCTTCATACTTG-3′ |
FIGURE 1Growth curves of three fungi treated with different voltages: Phanerochaete chrysosporium (A), Trametes versicolor (B), and Lentinula edodes (C).
FIGURE 2The pH of the medium after being cultured with three fungi with different voltages: Phanerochaete chrysosporium (A), Trametes versicolor (B), and Lentinula edodes (C).
Lignin degradation efficiency by three fungi at different voltages.
| Strains | Lignin degradation efficiency (%) at different voltages | |||||
| 0V | 1V | 2V | 3V | 4V | 5V | |
| 17 ± 1 | 23 ± 2 | 50 ± 2 | 79 ± 3 | 82 ± 3 | 78 ± 2 | |
| 19 ± 2 | 28 ± 3 | 55 ± 2 | 77 ± 3 | 86 ± 3 | 75 ± 2 | |
| 19 ± 2 | 34 ± 3 | 60 ± 3 | 87 ± 4 | 89 ± 3 | 85 ± 3 | |
| No fungi | N/A | 7 ± 1 | 12 ± 2 | 15 ± 1 | 19 ± 1 | 22 ± 2 |
FIGURE 3Proposed mechanism of the synergistic degradation of lignin by electro-Fenton reaction and white-rot fungi.
FIGURE 413C NMR spectra of standard lignin sample (A) and lignin samples after being cultured with Phanerochaete chrysosporium (B), Trametes versicolor (C), or Lentinula edodes (D).
Signal assignments of lignin medium samples in the 13C NMR.
| δ (ppm) | Assignments | δ (ppm) | Assignments |
| 152.3 | C3/C5 in S unit | 115.6 | C5 in S unit |
| 150–148 | C3 in G unit | 111.1 | C2 in G unit |
| 147.0 | C4 in G unit | 104.2 | C2/C6 in S unit |
| 130.1 | C2/C6 in pCA unit | 62–75 | Interunit linkages |
| 128 | C2/C6 in H unit | (β-5, β-β and β-O-4) | |
| 119 | C6/C5 in G unit | 56.5 | OCH3 in G and S unit |
FIGURE 5Enzyme activities (units per milliliter) in lignin samples after treated with Phanerochaete chrysosporium (A), Trametes versicolor (B), or Lentinula edodes (C) at the 24th, 48th, 72nd, and 96th hours post inoculation: MnP (a), LiP (b), and Lac (c).
FIGURE 6Effects of different electro-Fenton levels on the mRNA expression patterns of lignin-degrading enzymes in Phanerochaete chrysosporium (A), Trametes versicolor (B), and Lentinula edodes (C). Quantitative real-time PCR analysis was performed with samples obtained after 96 h of cultivation of white-rot fungi at varying electro-Fenton concentrations. Asterisk indicates significance at p < 0.05. β-Actin (A,C) and β-tubulin (B) were used as internal control genes for normalization.