Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237

Processing of lignocellulosic biomass for transportation fuels and other biocommodities in integrated biorefineries has been proposed as the future for emerging sustainable economies. Currently bioprocessing strategies are all multi-step processes involving extensive physicochemical pretreatments a...

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Main Author: Agbor, Valery
Other Authors: Levin, David (Biosystems Engineering) Cicek, Nazim (Biosystems Engineering)
Published: Biotechnology Advances / ELSEVIER 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30647
id ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-30647
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Biomass
Consolidated
Bioprocessing
Biofuels
Fermentation
pretreatment
spellingShingle Biomass
Consolidated
Bioprocessing
Biofuels
Fermentation
pretreatment
Agbor, Valery
Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
description Processing of lignocellulosic biomass for transportation fuels and other biocommodities in integrated biorefineries has been proposed as the future for emerging sustainable economies. Currently bioprocessing strategies are all multi-step processes involving extensive physicochemical pretreatments and costly amounts of exogenous enzyme addition. Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP), or direct microbial conversion, is a strategy that combines all the stages of production into one step, thus avoiding the use of expensive pretreatments and exogenous enzymes that reduce the economic viability of the products produced. With a growing trend towards increased consolidation, most of the reported work on CBP has been conducted with soluble sugars or commercial reagent grade cellulose. For CBP to become practical fermentative guidelines with native feedstocks and purified cellulose need to be delineated through specific substrate characterization as it relates to possible industrial fermentation. By carefully reviewing the fundamentals of biomass pretreatments for CBP, a comparative assessment of the fermentability of non-food agricultural residue and processed biomass was conducted with Clostridium thermocellum DSMZ 1237. Cell growth, and both gaseous and liquid fermentation end-product profiles of C. thermocellum as a CBP processing candidate was characterised. Batch fermentation experiments to investigate the effect of cellulose content, pretreatment, and substrate concentration, revealed that higher yields were correlated with higher cellulose content. Pretreatment of native substrates that increased access of the bacterial cells and enzymes to cellulose chains in the biomass substrate were key parameters that determined the overall bioconversion of a given feedstock to end-products. The contribution of amorphous cellulose (CAC) in different biomass substrates subjected to the same pretreatment conditions was identified as a novel factor that contributed to differences in bioconversion and end-product synthesis patterns. Although the overall yield of end products was low following bioaugmentation with exogenous glycosyl hydrolases from free-enzyme systems and cellulosome extracts. Treatment of biomass substrates with glycosyl hydrolase enzymes was observed to increase the rate of bioconversion of native feedstocks in biphasic manner during fermentation with C. thermocellum. A “quotient of accessibility” was identified as a feedstock agnostic guideline for biomass digestibility. === October 2015
author2 Levin, David (Biosystems Engineering) Cicek, Nazim (Biosystems Engineering)
author_facet Levin, David (Biosystems Engineering) Cicek, Nazim (Biosystems Engineering)
Agbor, Valery
author Agbor, Valery
author_sort Agbor, Valery
title Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
title_short Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
title_full Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
title_fullStr Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
title_full_unstemmed Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237
title_sort processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, clostridium thermocellum strain dsmz 1237
publisher Biotechnology Advances / ELSEVIER
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30647
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-306472015-09-20T15:43:12Z Processing of lignocellulosics feedstocks for biofuels and co-products via consolidated bioprocessing with the thermophilic bacterium, Clostridium thermocellum strain DSMZ 1237 Agbor, Valery Levin, David (Biosystems Engineering) Cicek, Nazim (Biosystems Engineering) Butler, Michael (Microbiology) Chen, Ying (Biosystems Engineering) Berlin, Alex (Biosystems Engineering) Cheng, Jay J. (Biological and Agricultural Engineering, North Carolina State University) Biomass Consolidated Bioprocessing Biofuels Fermentation pretreatment Processing of lignocellulosic biomass for transportation fuels and other biocommodities in integrated biorefineries has been proposed as the future for emerging sustainable economies. Currently bioprocessing strategies are all multi-step processes involving extensive physicochemical pretreatments and costly amounts of exogenous enzyme addition. Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP), or direct microbial conversion, is a strategy that combines all the stages of production into one step, thus avoiding the use of expensive pretreatments and exogenous enzymes that reduce the economic viability of the products produced. With a growing trend towards increased consolidation, most of the reported work on CBP has been conducted with soluble sugars or commercial reagent grade cellulose. For CBP to become practical fermentative guidelines with native feedstocks and purified cellulose need to be delineated through specific substrate characterization as it relates to possible industrial fermentation. By carefully reviewing the fundamentals of biomass pretreatments for CBP, a comparative assessment of the fermentability of non-food agricultural residue and processed biomass was conducted with Clostridium thermocellum DSMZ 1237. Cell growth, and both gaseous and liquid fermentation end-product profiles of C. thermocellum as a CBP processing candidate was characterised. Batch fermentation experiments to investigate the effect of cellulose content, pretreatment, and substrate concentration, revealed that higher yields were correlated with higher cellulose content. Pretreatment of native substrates that increased access of the bacterial cells and enzymes to cellulose chains in the biomass substrate were key parameters that determined the overall bioconversion of a given feedstock to end-products. The contribution of amorphous cellulose (CAC) in different biomass substrates subjected to the same pretreatment conditions was identified as a novel factor that contributed to differences in bioconversion and end-product synthesis patterns. Although the overall yield of end products was low following bioaugmentation with exogenous glycosyl hydrolases from free-enzyme systems and cellulosome extracts. Treatment of biomass substrates with glycosyl hydrolase enzymes was observed to increase the rate of bioconversion of native feedstocks in biphasic manner during fermentation with C. thermocellum. A “quotient of accessibility” was identified as a feedstock agnostic guideline for biomass digestibility. October 2015 2015-07-30T19:44:13Z 2015-07-30T19:44:13Z 2011 2014 2014 2011 Agbor, VB, Cicek N, Sparling R, Berlin A, Levin DB. 2011. Biomass pretreatment: fundamentals toward application. Biotechnology advances 29, no. 6, 675-685; Levin DB, Agbor VB, Carare C, Cicek N, Sparling R. 2014. Biomass Pretreatment for Consolidated Bioprocessing (CBP). Chapter 47, In, “Advances in Biorefineries: Biomass and waste supply chain exploitation”, KW Waldron (Ed.). Woodhead Publishing, Cambridge, UK. ISBN-13: 978 0 85709 521 3. Agbor V, Zurzolo F, Blunt W, Dartiailh C, Cicek N, Sparling R, Berlin A, Levin DB. 2014. Single-step fermentation of hemp residues for hydrogen and ethanol production. Biomass and Bioenergy, 64, 62-69. Agbor V, Blunt W, Cicek N, Sparling R, Berlin A, Levin DB. 2011. Processing of celluylosic feedstocks for ethanol and hydrogen production. Journal of Science and Technology for Forest Products and Processes, 1, 54-61 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30647 Biotechnology Advances / ELSEVIER Woodhead Publishing, Cambridge, UK / ELSEVIER Biomass and Bioenergy / ELSEVIER Journal of Science and Technology for Forest Products and Processes