Tan Hwei-Ting, Corbin Kendall R, Fincher Geoffrey B
Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane QLD, Australia.
Centre for Marine Bioproducts Development, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Bedford Park SA, Australia.
Front Plant Sci. 2016 Dec 8;7:1854. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01854. eCollection 2016.
Plant cell walls are composed predominantly of cellulose, a range of non-cellulosic polysaccharides and lignin. The walls account for a large proportion not only of crop residues such as wheat straw and sugarcane bagasse, but also of residues of the timber industry and specialist grasses and other plants being grown specifically for biofuel production. The polysaccharide components of plant cell walls have long been recognized as an extraordinarily large source of fermentable sugars that might be used for the production of bioethanol and other renewable liquid transport fuels. Estimates place annual plant cellulose production from captured light energy in the order of hundreds of billions of tons. Lignin is synthesized in the same order of magnitude and, as a very large polymer of phenylpropanoid residues, lignin is also an abundant, high energy macromolecule. However, one of the major functions of these cell wall constituents in plants is to provide the extreme tensile and compressive strengths that enable plants to resist the forces of gravity and a broad range of other mechanical forces. Over millions of years these wall constituents have evolved under natural selection to generate extremely tough and resilient biomaterials. The rapid degradation of these tough cell wall composites to fermentable sugars is therefore a difficult task and has significantly slowed the development of a viable lignocellulose-based biofuels industry. However, good progress has been made in overcoming this so-called recalcitrance of lignocellulosic feedstocks for the biofuels industry, through modifications to the lignocellulose itself, innovative pre-treatments of the biomass, improved enzymes and the development of superior yeasts and other microorganisms for the fermentation process. Nevertheless, it has been argued that bioethanol might not be the best or only biofuel that can be generated from lignocellulosic biomass sources and that hydrocarbons with intrinsically higher energy densities might be produced using emerging and continuous flow systems that are capable of converting a broad range of plant and other biomasses to bio-oils through so-called 'agnostic' technologies such as hydrothermal liquefaction. Continued attention to regulatory frameworks and ongoing government support will be required for the next phase of development of internationally viable biofuels industries.
植物细胞壁主要由纤维素、多种非纤维素多糖和木质素组成。这些细胞壁不仅在诸如小麦秸秆和甘蔗渣等农作物残余物中占很大比例,在木材工业残余物以及专门为生物燃料生产而种植的特殊草类和其他植物中也占很大比例。长期以来,人们一直认为植物细胞壁中的多糖成分是可发酵糖的巨大来源,这些糖可用于生产生物乙醇和其他可再生液体运输燃料。据估计,每年通过捕获光能产生的植物纤维素产量达数千亿吨。木质素的合成量也处于同一数量级,作为一种由苯丙烷残基组成的非常大的聚合物,木质素也是一种丰富的、高能量的大分子。然而,这些细胞壁成分在植物中的主要功能之一是提供极强的拉伸和抗压强度,使植物能够抵抗重力和其他各种机械力。在数百万年的时间里,这些细胞壁成分在自然选择下进化,形成了极其坚韧和有弹性的生物材料。因此,将这些坚韧的细胞壁复合物快速降解为可发酵糖是一项艰巨的任务,这显著减缓了可行的基于木质纤维素的生物燃料产业的发展。不过,通过对木质纤维素本身进行改性、对生物质进行创新预处理、改进酶以及开发用于发酵过程的优质酵母和其他微生物,在克服木质纤维素原料对生物燃料产业的这种所谓顽固性方面已经取得了良好进展。然而,有人认为生物乙醇可能不是从木质纤维素生物质来源生产的最佳或唯一生物燃料,使用新兴的连续流系统或许可以生产出具有更高固有能量密度的碳氢化合物,这些系统能够通过水热液化等所谓的“无差别”技术将多种植物和其他生物质转化为生物油。国际上可行的生物燃料产业的下一阶段发展将需要持续关注监管框架并获得政府的持续支持。