Solid-, solution-, and gas-state NMR monitoring of 13C-cellulose degradation in an anaerobic microbial ecosystem

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Abstract

Anaerobic digestion of biomacromolecules in various microbial ecosystems is influenced by the variations in types, qualities, and quantities of chemical components. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful tool for characterizing the degradation of solids to gases in anaerobic digestion processes. Here we describe a characterization strategy using NMR spectroscopy for targeting the input solid insoluble biomass, catabolized soluble metabolites, and produced gases. 13C-labeled cellulose produced by Gluconacetobacter xylinus was added as a substrate to stirred tank reactors and gradually degraded for 120 h. The time-course variations in structural heterogeneity of cellulose catabolism were determined using solid-state NMR, and soluble metabolites produced by cellulose degradation were monitored using solution-state NMR. In particular, cooperative changes between the solid NMR signal and 13C-13C/13C-12C isotopomers in the microbial degradation of 13C-cellulose were revealed by a correlation heat map. The triple phase NMR measurements demonstrated that cellulose was anaerobically degraded, fermented, and converted to methane gas from organic acids such as acetic acid and butyric acid. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Yamazawa, A., Iikura, T., Shino, A., Date, Y., & Kikuchi, J. (2013). Solid-, solution-, and gas-state NMR monitoring of 13C-cellulose degradation in an anaerobic microbial ecosystem. Molecules, 18(8), 9021–9033. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules18089021

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