Chundawat Shishir P S, Balan Venkatesh, Dale Bruce E
Biomass Conversion Research Lab, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA.
Biotechnol Bioeng. 2008 Apr 15;99(6):1281-94. doi: 10.1002/bit.21805.
Several factors will influence the viability of a biochemical platform for manufacturing lignocellulosic based fuels and chemicals, for example, genetically engineering energy crops, reducing pre-treatment severity, and minimizing enzyme loading. Past research on biomass conversion has focused largely on acid based pre-treatment technologies that fractionate lignin and hemicellulose from cellulose. However, for alkaline based (e.g., AFEX) and other lower severity pre-treatments it becomes critical to co-hydrolyze cellulose and hemicellulose using an optimized enzyme cocktail. Lignocellulosics are appropriate substrates to assess hydrolytic activity of enzyme mixtures compared to conventional unrealistic substrates (e.g., filter paper, chromogenic, and fluorigenic compounds) for studying synergistic hydrolysis. However, there are few, if any, high-throughput lignocellulosic digestibility analytical platforms for optimizing biomass conversion. The 96-well Biomass Conversion Research Lab (BCRL) microplate method is a high-throughput assay to study digestibility of lignocellulosic biomass as a function of biomass composition, pre-treatment severity, and enzyme composition. The most suitable method for delivering milled biomass to the microplate was through multi-pipetting slurry suspensions. A rapid bio-enzymatic, spectrophotometric assay was used to determine fermentable sugars. The entire procedure was automated using a robotic pipetting workstation. Several parameters that affect hydrolysis in the microplate were studied and optimized (i.e., particle size reduction, slurry solids concentration, glucan loading, mass transfer issues, and time period for hydrolysis). The microplate method was optimized for crystalline cellulose (Avicel) and ammonia fiber expansion (AFEX) pre-treated corn stover.
有几个因素会影响用于生产木质纤维素基燃料和化学品的生化平台的可行性,例如,对能源作物进行基因工程改造、降低预处理强度以及尽量减少酶的用量。过去关于生物质转化的研究主要集中在基于酸的预处理技术上,这些技术可将木质素和半纤维素与纤维素分离。然而,对于基于碱的预处理(如AFEX)和其他低强度预处理而言,使用优化的酶混合物共同水解纤维素和半纤维素变得至关重要。与用于研究协同水解的传统不切实际的底物(如滤纸、发色和荧光化合物)相比,木质纤维素是评估酶混合物水解活性的合适底物。然而,用于优化生物质转化的高通量木质纤维素消化率分析平台几乎没有(如果有的话)。96孔生物质转化研究实验室(BCRL)微孔板方法是一种高通量测定法,用于研究木质纤维素生物质的消化率与生物质组成、预处理强度和酶组成的关系。将研磨后的生物质输送到微孔板的最合适方法是通过多次移液悬浮液。使用快速生物酶分光光度法测定可发酵糖。整个过程使用自动移液工作站实现自动化。研究并优化了几个影响微孔板水解的参数(即粒度减小、浆料固体浓度、葡聚糖负载量、传质问题和水解时间段)。该微孔板方法针对结晶纤维素(微晶纤维素)和氨纤维膨胀(AFEX)预处理的玉米秸秆进行了优化。