This study is the first to apply dilute acid pretreatment (DAP) under different severity conditions to poplar wood genetically modified for the cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD1) gene, which is involved in the lignin biosynthesis pathway. The carefully selected pretreatment conditions resulted in glucose yields that were 15 points higher for the hpCAD poplar line than for the wild-type (WT) wood after 48 h of enzymatic hydrolysis. To explain this higher saccharification rate, the chemical, spectral and structural changes in WT and hpCAD wood were analyzed in relation to the severity of the pretreatment process. Although few differences were found at the chemical level, variations in autofluorescence and cell deformation were more significant: at high severity, the cells of hpCAD wood observed by nanotomography were more easily deformed, but their middle lamella was more resistant than those of WT wood. All these differences are possibly explained by changes in the molecular structure of lignin in hpCAD wood, leading to the formation of more hydrophobic shorter monomer chains with fewer lignin‒carbohydrate interactions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13068-025-02623-8 | DOI Listing |
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
March 2025
Université Paris-Saclay, CentraleSupélec, Laboratoire de Génie Des Procédés et Matériaux, Centre Européen de Biotechnologie et de Bioéconomie (CEBB), 51110, Pomacle, France.
This study is the first to apply dilute acid pretreatment (DAP) under different severity conditions to poplar wood genetically modified for the cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD1) gene, which is involved in the lignin biosynthesis pathway. The carefully selected pretreatment conditions resulted in glucose yields that were 15 points higher for the hpCAD poplar line than for the wild-type (WT) wood after 48 h of enzymatic hydrolysis. To explain this higher saccharification rate, the chemical, spectral and structural changes in WT and hpCAD wood were analyzed in relation to the severity of the pretreatment process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
September 2022
Department of Plant Biotechnology and Bioinformatics, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
The potential of whole genome duplication to increase plant biomass yield is well-known. In Arabidopsis tetraploids, an increase in biomass yield was accompanied by a reduction in lignin content and, as a result, a higher saccharification efficiency was achieved compared with diploid controls. Here, we evaluated whether the results obtained in Arabidopsis could be translated into poplar and whether the enhanced saccharification yield upon alkaline pretreatment of hairpin-downregulated () transgenic poplar could be further improved upon a whole genome duplication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
December 2022
Department of Plant Biotechnology and Bioinformatics, Ghent University, Technologiepark 71, 9052, Ghent, Belgium.
Lignin is one of the main factors causing lignocellulosic biomass recalcitrance to enzymatic hydrolysis. Glasshouse-grown poplars severely downregulated for CINNAMYL ALCOHOL DEHYDROGENASE 1 (CAD1), the enzyme catalysing the last step in the monolignol-specific branch of lignin biosynthesis, have increased saccharification yields and normal growth. Here, we assess the performance of these hpCAD poplars in the field under short rotation coppice culture for two consecutive rotations of 1 yr and 3 yr.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlanta
April 2018
Institute for Building Materials (IfB), ETH Zurich, 8093, Zurich, Switzerland.
CAD-deficient poplars enabled studying the influence of altered lignin composition on mechanical properties. Severe alterations in lignin composition did not influence the mechanical properties. Wood represents a hierarchical fiber-composite material with excellent mechanical properties.
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