34 research outputs found
Quantitative proteomic analysis of the influence of lignin on biofuel production by Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824
Background: Clostridium acetobutylicum has been a focus of research because of its ability to produce high-value
compounds that can be used as biofuels. Lignocellulose is a promising feedstock, but the lignin–cellulose–hemicellulose
biomass complex requires chemical pre-treatment to yield fermentable saccharides, including cellulose-derived
cellobiose, prior to bioproduction of acetone–butanol–ethanol (ABE) and hydrogen. Fermentation capability is
limited by lignin and thus process optimization requires knowledge of lignin inhibition. The effects of lignin on cellular
metabolism were evaluated for C. acetobutylicum grown on medium containing either cellobiose only or cellobiose
plus lignin. Microscopy, gas chromatography and 8-plex iTRAQ-based quantitative proteomic technologies were
applied to interrogate the effect of lignin on cellular morphology, fermentation and the proteome.
Results: Our results demonstrate that C. acetobutylicum has reduced performance for solvent production when
lignin is present in the medium. Medium supplemented with 1 g L−1
of lignin led to delay and decreased solvents
production (ethanol; 0.47 g L−1
for cellobiose and 0.27 g L−1
for cellobiose plus lignin and butanol; 0.13 g L−1
for cellobiose
and 0.04 g L−1
for cellobiose plus lignin) at 20 and 48 h, respectively, resulting in the accumulation of acetic
acid and butyric acid. Of 583 identified proteins (FDR < 1 %), 328 proteins were quantified with at least two unique
peptides. Up- or down-regulation of protein expression was determined by comparison of exponential and stationary
phases of cellobiose in the presence and absence of lignin. Of relevance, glycolysis and fermentative pathways were
mostly down-regulated, during exponential and stationary growth phases in presence of lignin. Moreover, proteins
involved in DNA repair, transcription/translation and GTP/ATP-dependent activities were also significantly affected
and these changes were associated with altered cell morphology.
Conclusions: This is the first comprehensive analysis of the cellular responses of C. acetobutylicum to lignin at metabolic
and physiological levels. These data will enable targeted metabolic engineering strategies to optimize biofuel
production from biomass by overcoming limitations imposed by the presence of lignin
Evaluation of Methods for the Analysis of Untreated and Processed Lignocellulosic Biomasses
The overall efficiency of the transformation of lignocellulosic materials to usable
products as chemicals and fuels must be governed by adequate analysis of products
before and after treatments. Using some promising technologies, lignocelluloses which
are biomasses from marine plant and trees, grains, food and non-food crops, and woodbased
can give products as fuel alcohol and other chemicals. Various methods of
transformation from feedstock to valuable end products are discussed in the scientific
literature. Therefore, yields must justify methods used for biomass transformations. As
a result, adequate compositional analysis of these processing stages is needed. In this
chapter, standard common methods such as gravimetric, chromatography,
spectroscopic and their variations for analysis on both untreated and treated
lignocelluloses are highlighted. The ease of the use and challenges with
recommendations to their applicability to quantifying lignocelluloses fractionations for
reproducibility and to be representative are discussed. With biomass technology,
virtually all and even more products that can be produced from fossil energy can also
be produced from biomass energy. Adequate analysis is therefore necessary