Biotechnology & Biotechnological Equipment (Dec 2022)
Combinations of mild chemical and bacterial pretreatment for improving enzymatic saccharification of corn stover
Abstract
AbstractBiological pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass plays an important role for the enzymatic hydrolysis. In this study, a nitrogen-fixing and lignin-degrading strain of bacteria was isolated from an abandoned termite colony. Then, it was identified and named as R. ornithinolytica RS-1. To improve the degradation and enzymatic saccharification in corn stover, we used pretreatment with strain RS-1 to deplete the lignin, combined with a 2.5% mild NaOH pretreatment to further deplete the hemicellulose. After only seven days, lignin was degraded by the bacteria RS-1 with a 19% decrease, while the relative content of cellulose increased with 21%. Furthermore, the corn stover cellulose conversion was up to 48.58% by a two-stage process with 2.5% NaOH pretreatment. Meanwhile, significant lignin and hemicellulose removal were observed. Manganese peroxidase activity was highest on Day 3 with the value 181.0256 U/L and lignin peroxidase activity was highest on Day 5 with the value 37.473 U/L, respectively. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses showed significant chemical structural changes after the combined pretreatment. Therefore, strain RS-1 provided an efficient strategy to enhance the enzymatic hydrolysis efficiency by pretreatment of corn stover.
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