Background: The conversion of plant biomass to ethanol via enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis offers a potentially sustainable route to biofuel production. However, the inhibition of enzymatic activity in pretreated biomass by lignin severely limits the efficiency of this process. Results: By performing atomic-detail molecular dynamics simulation of a biomass model containing cellulose, lignin, and cellulases (TrCel7A), we elucidate detailed lignin inhibition mechanisms. We find that lignin binds preferentially both to the elements of cellulose to which the cellulases also preferentially bind (the hydrophobic faces) and also to the specific residues on the cellulose-binding module of the cellulase that are critical for cellulose binding of TrCel7A (Y466, Y492, and Y493). Conclusions: Lignin thus binds exactly where for industrial purposes it is least desired, providing a simple explanation of why hydrolysis yields increase with lignin removal.
CITATION STYLE
Vermaas, J. V., Petridis, L., Qi, X., Schulz, R., Lindner, B., & Smith, J. C. (2015). Mechanism of lignin inhibition of enzymatic biomass deconstruction. Biotechnology for Biofuels, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13068-015-0379-8
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.