AI Article Synopsis

  • A bifunctional glycoside hydrolase (GH78) from ascomycete shows versatility in breaking down both glycosides and esters, which helps in degrading the complex structure of plant cell walls.
  • The study examined the enzyme's effectiveness in converting lignocellulosic materials without chemical pretreatment, leading to the release of valuable compounds like carbohydrates and methanol.
  • The combination of GH78 with other enzymes resulted in a notable increase in carbohydrate yield and improved methanol release during the conversion of rape straw and beech wood, demonstrating the potential of these enzymatic treatments for biomass utilization.

Article Abstract

A bifunctional glycoside hydrolase GH78 from the ascomycete (GH78) possesses catalytic versatility towards both glycosides and esters, which may be advantageous for the efficient degradation of the plant cell-wall complex that contains both diverse sugar residues and esterified structures. The contribution of GH78 to the conversion of lignocellulosic materials without any chemical pretreatment to release the water-soluble aromatic fragments, carbohydrates, and methanol was studied. The disintegrating effect of enzymatic lignocellulose treatment can be significantly improved by using different kinds of hydrolases and phenoloxidases. The considerable changes in low (3 kDa), medium (30 kDa), and high (> 200 kDa) aromatic fragments were observed after the treatment with GH78 alone or with this potent cocktail. Synergistic conversion of rape straw also resulted in a release of 17.3 mg of total carbohydrates (, arabinose, galactose, glucose, mannose, xylose) per gram of substrate after incubating for 72 h. Moreover, the treatment of rape straw with GH78 led to a marginal methanol release of approximately 17 μg/g and improved to 270 μg/g by cooperation with the above accessory enzymes. In the case of beech wood conversion, the combined catalysis by GH78 and laccase caused an effect comparable with that of fungal strain in woody cultures concerning the liberation of aromatic lignocellulose fragments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9705965PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4014/jmb.2106.06053DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

aromatic fragments
12
lignocellulosic materials
8
glycoside hydrolase
8
fragments carbohydrates
8
rape straw
8
gh78
7
bioconversion lignocellulosic
4
materials contribution
4
contribution multifunctional
4
multifunctional gh78
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!