The productive cellulase binding capacity of cellulosic substrates

ABSTRACT Cellulosic biomass is the most promising feedstock for renewable biofuel production; however, the mechanisms of the heterogeneous cellulose saccharification reaction are still unsolved. As cellulases need to bind isolated molecules of cellulose at the surface of insoluble cellulose fibrils...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biotechnology and bioengineering 2017-03, Vol.114 (3), p.533-542
Hauptverfasser: Karuna, Nardrapee, Jeoh, Tina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACT Cellulosic biomass is the most promising feedstock for renewable biofuel production; however, the mechanisms of the heterogeneous cellulose saccharification reaction are still unsolved. As cellulases need to bind isolated molecules of cellulose at the surface of insoluble cellulose fibrils or larger aggregated cellulose structures in order to hydrolyze glycosidic bonds, the “accessibility of cellulose to cellulases” is considered to be a reaction limiting property of cellulose. We have defined the accessibility of cellulose to cellulases as the productive binding capacity of cellulose, that is, the concentration of productive binding sites on cellulose that are accessible for binding and hydrolysis by cellulases. Productive cellulase binding to cellulose results in hydrolysis and can be quantified by measuring hydrolysis rates. In this study, we measured the productive Trichoderma reesei Cel7A (TrCel7A) binding capacity of five cellulosic substrates from different sources and processing histories. Swollen filter paper and bacterial cellulose had higher productive binding capacities of ∼6 µmol/g while filter paper, microcrystalline cellulose, and algal cellulose had lower productive binding capacities of ∼3 µmol/g. Swelling and regenerating filter paper using phosphoric acid increased the initial accessibility of the reducing ends to TrCel7A from 4 to 6 µmol/g. Moreover, this increase in initial productive binding capacity accounted in large part for the difference in the overall digestibility between filter paper and swollen filter paper. We further demonstrated that an understanding of how the productive binding capacity declines over the course of the hydrolysis reaction has the potential to predict overall saccharification time courses. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 533–542. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Productive binding sites on cellulose are sites at which cellulases bind and hydrolyze glycosidic bonds. The productive binding capacity of cellulosic substrates is thus the total moles of productive binding sites per mass of the insoluble substrate. We present a method to measure the productive cellulase binding capacity of cellulose based on a mechanistic model relating the initial productive cellulase binding concentrations to enzyme loadings. Processing histories and source are shown to impact the productive cellulase binding capacities of cellulose.
ISSN:0006-3592
1097-0290
DOI:10.1002/bit.26193