Lignocellulose Degradation in Bacteria and Fungi for Biomass Conversion
Hsin, K.-T.; Lee, H.; Lin, Y.-C. J.; Chen, P.-Y.
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Lignocellulose biomass is one of the most abundant resources for sustainable biofuels. However, scaling up the biomass-to-biofuels conversion process for widespread usage is still pending. Bottlenecks during the process of enzymatic hydrolysis are the high cost of enzymes and the labor-intensive need for substrate-dependent enzyme mixtures. Current research efforts are therefore targeted at searching for or engineering lignocellulolytic enzymes of high efficiency. One way is to engineer multi-enzyme complexes that mimic the bacterial cellulosomal system, known to increase degradation efficiency up to 50-fold when compared to freely-secreted enzymes. However, these designer cellulosomes are instable and less efficient than wild type cellulosomes. Fungi cellulosomes discovered in recent years have significant differences from bacterial counterparts and hold great potential for industrial applications, both as designer cellulosomes and as additions to the enzymatic repertoire. Up to date, they are only found in a few anaerobic fungi. In this review, we extensively compared the degradation mechanisms in bacteria and fungi, and highlighted the essential gaps in applying these mechanisms in industrial applications. To better understand cellulosomes in microorganisms, we examined their sequences in 66,252 bacterial species and 823 fungal species and identified several bacterial species that are potentially cellulosome-producing. These findings act as a valuable resource in the biomass community for further proteomic and genetic sequence analysis. We also collated the current strategies of bioengineering lignocellulose degradation to suggest concepts that could be favorable for industrial usage.
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