Engineered Sorghum Bagasse Enables a Sustainable Biorefinery with p-Hydroxybenzoic Acid-Based Deep Eutectic Solvent.
Yunxuan WangXianzhi MengYang TianKwang Ho KimLinjing JiaYunqiao PuGyu LeemDeepak KumarAymerick EudesArthur J RagauskasChang Geun YooPublished in: ChemSusChem (2021)
Integrating multidisciplinary research in plant genetic engineering and renewable deep eutectic solvents (DESs) can facilitate a sustainable and economic biorefinery. Herein, we leveraged a plant genetic engineering approach to specifically incorporate C6 C1 monomers into the lignin structure. By expressing the bacterial ubiC gene in sorghum, p-hydroxybenzoic acid (PB)-rich lignin was incorporated into the plant cell wall while this monomer was completely absent in the lignin of the wild-type (WT) biomass. A DES was synthesized with choline chloride (ChCl) and PB and applied to the pretreatment of the PB-rich mutant biomass for a sustainable biorefinery. The release of fermentable sugars was significantly enhanced (∼190 % increase) compared to untreated biomass by the DES pretreatment. In particular, the glucose released from the pretreated mutant biomass was up to 12 % higher than that from the pretreated WT biomass. Lignin was effectively removed from the biomass with the preservation of more than half of the β-Ο-4 linkages without condensed aromatic structures. Hydrogenolysis of the fractionated lignin was conducted to demonstrate the potential of phenolic compound production. In addition, a simple hydrothermal treatment could selectively extract PB from the same engineered lignin, showing a possible circular biorefinery. These results suggest that the combination of PB-based DES and engineered PB-rich biomass is a promising strategy to achieve a sustainable closed-loop biorefinery.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- anaerobic digestion
- heavy metals
- wastewater treatment
- wild type
- cell wall
- aqueous solution
- genome wide
- copy number
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- sewage sludge
- small cell lung cancer
- oxidative stress
- metabolic syndrome
- quality improvement
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- climate change
- human health
- plant growth
- replacement therapy
- tandem mass spectrometry