| Literature DB >> 33905799 |
Madhu Nair Muraleedharan1, Anthi Karnaouri2, Maria Piatkova3, Maria-Ximena Ruiz-Caldas3, Leonidas Matsakas1, Bing Liu4, Ulrika Rova1, Paul Christakopoulos1, Aji P Mathew5.
Abstract
Nanocellulose isolation from lignocellulose is a tedious and expensive process with high energy and harsh chemical requirements, primarily due to the recalcitrance of the substrate, which otherwise would have been cost-effective due to its abundance. Replacing the chemical steps with biocatalytic processes offers opportunities to solve this bottleneck to a certain extent due to the enzymes substrate specificity and mild reaction chemistry. In this work, we demonstrate the isolation of sulphate-free nanocellulose from organosolv pretreated birch biomass using different glycosyl-hydrolases, along with accessory oxidative enzymes including a lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO). The suggested process produced colloidal nanocellulose suspensions (ζ-potential -19.4 mV) with particles of 7-20 nm diameter, high carboxylate content and improved thermostability (To = 301 °C, Tmax = 337 °C). Nanocelluloses were subjected to post-modification using LPMOs of different regioselectivity. The sample from chemical route was the least favorable for LPMO to enhance the carboxylate content, while that from the C1-specific LPMO treatment showed the highest increase in carboxylate content.Entities:
Keywords: LPMO biocatalysis; Nanocellulose; Post-treatment modification/functionalization
Year: 2021 PMID: 33905799 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2021.04.136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Macromol ISSN: 0141-8130 Impact factor: 6.953