Composition and Structure of Sugarcane Cell Wall Polysaccharides: Implications for Second-Generation Bioethanol Production

被引:0
|
作者
Amanda P. de Souza
Débora C. C. Leite
Sivakumar Pattathil
Michael G. Hahn
Marcos S. Buckeridge
机构
[1] University of São Paulo,Laboratory of Plant Physiological Ecology (LAFIECO), Department of Botany, Institute of Biosciences
[2] The University of Georgia,BioEnergy Science Center, Complex Carbohydrate Research Center
来源
BioEnergy Research | 2013年 / 6卷
关键词
Bioenergy; Cellulosic ethanol; Hemicelluloses; Cell wall composition; Cell wall structure; Sugarcane;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The structure and fine structure of leaf and culm cell walls of sugarcane plants were analyzed using a combination of microscopic, chemical, biochemical, and immunological approaches. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that leaves and culm display autofluorescence and lignin distributed differently through different cell types, the former resulting from phenylpropanoids associated with vascular bundles and the latter distributed throughout all cell walls in the tissue sections. Polysaccharides in leaf and culm walls are quite similar, but differ in the proportions of xyloglucan and arabinoxylan in some fractions. In both cases, xyloglucan (XG) and arabinoxylan (AX) are closely associated with cellulose, whereas pectins, mixed-linkage-β-glucan (BG), and less branched xylans are strongly bound to cellulose. Accessibility to hydrolases of cell wall fraction increased after fractionation, suggesting that acetyl and phenolic linkages, as well as polysaccharide–polysaccharide interactions, prevented enzyme action when cell walls are assembled in its native architecture. Differently from other hemicelluloses, BG was shown to be readily accessible to lichenase when in intact walls. These results indicate that wall architecture has important implications for the development of more efficient industrial processes for second-generation bioethanol production. Considering that pretreatments such as steam explosion and alkali may lead to loss of more soluble fractions of the cell walls (BG and pectins), second-generation bioethanol, as currently proposed for sugarcane feedstock, might lead to loss of a substantial proportion of the cell wall polysaccharides, therefore decreasing the potential of sugarcane for bioethanol production in the future.
引用
收藏
页码:564 / 579
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Composition and Structure of Sugarcane Cell Wall Polysaccharides: Implications for Second-Generation Bioethanol Production
    de Souza, Amanda P.
    Leite, Debora C. C.
    Pattathil, Sivakumar
    Hahn, Michael G.
    Buckeridge, Marcos S.
    BIOENERGY RESEARCH, 2013, 6 (02) : 564 - 579
  • [2] A review of sugarcane bagasse for second-generation bioethanol and biopower production
    Bezerra, Tais Lacerda
    Ragauskas, Art J.
    BIOFUELS BIOPRODUCTS & BIOREFINING-BIOFPR, 2016, 10 (05): : 634 - 647
  • [3] A new insight into integrated first and second-generation bioethanol production from sugarcane
    Moonsamy, Talia A.
    Mandegari, Mohsen
    Farzad, Somayeh
    Gorgens, Johann F.
    INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS, 2022, 188
  • [4] Integrated sugarcane biorefinery for first- and second-generation bioethanol production using imidazole pretreatment
    Valladares-Diestra, Kim Kley
    de Souza Vandenberghe, Luciana Porto
    Nishida, Veronica Sayuri
    Zevallos Torres, Luis Alberto
    Filho, Arion Zandona
    Soccol, Carlos Ricardo
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2022, 381
  • [5] Sugarcane as a Bioenergy Source: History, Performance, and Perspectives for Second-Generation Bioethanol
    Amanda P. de Souza
    Adriana Grandis
    Débora C. C. Leite
    Marcos S. Buckeridge
    BioEnergy Research, 2014, 7 : 24 - 35
  • [6] Sugarcane as a Bioenergy Source: History, Performance, and Perspectives for Second-Generation Bioethanol
    de Souza, Amanda P.
    Grandis, Adriana
    Leite, Debora C. C.
    Buckeridge, Marcos S.
    BIOENERGY RESEARCH, 2014, 7 (01) : 24 - 35
  • [7] Optimization of Cellulose Enzyme in the Simultaneous Saccharification and Fermentation of Sugarcane Bagasse on the Second-Generation Bioethanol Production Technology
    Wahono, Satriyo Krido
    Darsih, Cici
    Rosyida, Vita T.
    Maryana, Roni
    Pratiwi, Diah
    CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION INDONESIA RENEWABLE ENERGY & ENERGY CONSERVATION (INDONESIA EBTKE-CONEX 2013), 2014, 47 : 268 - 272
  • [8] Breaking the "Glycomic Code" of Cell Wall Polysaccharides May Improve Second-Generation Bioenergy Production from Biomass
    Buckeridge, Marcos S.
    de Souza, Amanda P.
    BIOENERGY RESEARCH, 2014, 7 (04) : 1065 - 1073
  • [9] Breaking the “Glycomic Code” of Cell Wall Polysaccharides May Improve Second-Generation Bioenergy Production from Biomass
    Marcos S. Buckeridge
    Amanda P. de Souza
    BioEnergy Research, 2014, 7 : 1065 - 1073
  • [10] Cost analysis of subcritical water pretreatment of sugarcane straw and bagasse for second-generation bioethanol production: a case study in a sugarcane mill
    Sganzerla, William Gustavo
    Lachos-Perez, Daniel
    Buller, Luz Selene
    Zabot, Giovani L.
    Forster-Carneiro, Tania
    BIOFUELS BIOPRODUCTS & BIOREFINING-BIOFPR, 2022, 16 (02): : 435 - 450