A finalized determinant for complete lignocellulose enzymatic saccharification potential to maximize bioethanol production in bioenergy Miscanthus

Aftab Alam(Huazhong Agricultural University), Ran Zhang(Huazhong Agricultural University), Peng Liu(Huazhong Agricultural University), Jiangfeng Huang(Huazhong Agricultural University), Yanting Wang(Huazhong Agricultural University), Zhen Hu(Huazhong Agricultural University), Meysam Madadi(Huazhong Agricultural University), Dan Sun(Wuhan University of Technology), Ruofei Hu(Hubei University of Arts and Science), Arthur J. Ragauskas(Knoxville College), Yuanyuan Tu(Huazhong Agricultural University), Liangcai Peng(Huazhong Agricultural University)
Biotechnology for Biofuels
April 27, 2019
Cited by 160Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: accessions that showed distinct cell wall compositions and sorted out three major factors that affected biomass saccharification for maximum bioethanol production. RESULTS: species subjected to stronger pretreatments as reported in previous studies. By comparison, three optimized pretreatments distinctively extracted wall polymers and specifically altered polymer features and inter-linkage styles, but the alkali pretreatment caused much increased biomass porosity than that of the other pretreatments. Based on integrative analyses, excellent equations were generated to precisely estimate hexoses and ethanol yields under various pretreatments and a hypothetical model was proposed to outline an integrative impact on biomass saccharification and bioethanol production subjective to a predominate factor (CR stain) of biomass porosity and four additional minor factors (DY stain, cellulose DP, hemicellulose X/A, lignin G-monomer). CONCLUSION: samples with distinct cell wall composition and varied biomass saccharification, this study has determined three main factors of lignocellulose recalcitrance that could be significantly reduced for much-increased biomass porosity upon optimal pretreatments. It has also established a novel standard that should be applicable to judge any types of biomass process technology for high biofuel production in distinct lignocellulose substrates. Hence, this study provides a potential strategy for precise genetic modification of lignocellulose in all bioenergy crops.


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