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Biotechnology for Biofuels 2016

Recalcitrant carbohydrates after enzymatic hydrolysis of pretreated lignocellulosic biomass.

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María Ángeles Bermúdez Alcántara
Justyna Dobruchowska
Parastoo Azadi
Bruno Díez García
Fernando P Molina-Heredia
Francisco Manuel Reyes-Sosa

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

To reduce the cost of the enzymes for the hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass, two main strategies have been followed: one, the reduction of enzyme dosing by the use of more efficient and stable enzymatic cocktails; another, to include accessory enzymes in the cocktails to increase yields by reducing the recalcitrant carbohydrate fraction remaining at the end of the process. To guide this second strategy, we have explored the chemical bond composition of different fractions of recalcitrant carbohydrates after enzymatic hydrolysis.

RESULTS

Two lignocellulosic feedstocks of relevance for the biofuels industry have been analyzed, corn stover and sugarcane straw. On comparing the composition of chemical bonds of the starting pretreated material with samples after standard and forced hydrolysis (with enzyme overdosing), we obtained similar sugar and chemical bond composition.

CONCLUSIONS

This suggests that the current enzymatic cocktails bear the set of enzymes needed to hydrolyze these feedstocks. From our point of view, the results show the need for a parallel fine-tuning of the enzymatic cocktails with the pretreatment process to maximize sugar release yield.

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