Agronomy (Feb 2024)

Comparative Study of the Convertibility of Pretreated Miscanthus Straw Using Enzyme Preparations Produced by Different Recombinant Strains of <i>Penicillium verruculosum</i>

  • Dmitrii O. Osipov,
  • Anna S. Dotsenko,
  • Margarita V. Semenova,
  • Alexandra M. Rozhkova,
  • Arkady P. Sinitsyn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14030499
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 499

Abstract

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Non-edible cellulosic biomass from perennial herbaceous plants is a promising and abundant feedstock for replacing slow-growing woody plants used in biotechnological applications. Herbaceous plant biomass, as other types of plant biomass, requires pretreatment before biochemical conversion. In this study, miscanthus straw was pretreated using different methods and subjected to enzymatic hydrolysis with Penicillium verruculosum enzyme complexes under laboratory conditions. The convertibility after enzymatic hydrolysis varied from 15% to 66%, depending on the pretreatment method. Dilute alkaline pretreatment showed the highest convertibility compared to other methods, reaching up to 66%. The efficiency of dilute acid pretreatment was relatively low compared to other methods. The maximum convertibility was 37% for sulfuric acid pretreatment (the least efficient) and 51% for nitric acid. Convertibility was almost equal with 43% for white liquor and 46% for hot water. The glucose-to-xylose ratio was 4.7:1 for dilute alkaline pretreatment and 11–13:1 for white liquor. Both sulfuric and nitric acid resulted in a low xylose content in the enzymatic hydrolysates. Low-xylose hydrolysates with less than 2% of the glucose amount can be produced by hot water pretreatment. Preparation C, enriched with endoglucanase I from T. reesei and endoglucanase II from P. verruculosum, was found to be the most effective of the different enzyme preparations (EPs) tested.

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