The structural recalcitrance of lignocellulose limits its enzymatic hydrolysis, which leads to inefficient enzyme usage and inhibition of saccharification, depending on the pretreatment method. Research on the structural properties of xylem tissues of hardwood and their effect on enzymatic saccharification is necessary to achieve cost-effective biofuel production via improved enzyme cocktail preparation. Oak wood (Quercus acutissima) was pretreated and delignified with a hydrogen peroxide-acetic acid (HPAC) solution. Cellulose was found to undergo significant swelling in the lumen of the wood fiber, and it was sorted into readily hydrolysable (72.9%), mid-hydrolysable (8.2%), and hardly hydrolysable (18.9%) cellulose forms. Oak wood has been shown to be strongly retarded among the various types of hardwoods. The recalcitrance of the xylem tissues, such as wood fibers, tracheids, vessel elements, and ray parenchyma cells, was determined through analysis of the hydrolysis rates. It was found to increase in the following order: ray parenchyma cells < tracheids < wood fibers or vessel elements < tracheids < wood fibers. The wood fibers were almost enzymatically fragmented into pieces ∼90 µm in length at crack sites in 6 h. The wood fibers were digested faster in the S 3 or S 2 wall than in the primary wall. The result indicated that the primary wall may be a structural retardation factor in the hardwood as sorted to the hardly hydrolysable cellulose. In presence of 10% substrate supplemented with enzymes to reduce the structural recalcitrance (xylanase and lytic polysaccharide monoxygenase) and end-product inhibitions (beta-glucosidase), the hydrolysis rate was increased by 55.21%. Ethanol fermentation exhibited a higher efficiency when a single substrate (Q. acutissima) rather than a mixture of various hardwoods was used. Of all the xylem tissues of hardwood that were delignified by HPAC pretreatment, wood fiber was found to be a structural retardation factor owing to the recalcitrance its primary wall. Thus, enzyme preparation can enable the rapid and efficient hydrolysis for the commercialization of bioethanol from hardwood.
Background Woody plants with high glucose content are alternative bioresources for the production of biofuels and biochemicals. Various pretreatment methods may be used to reduce the effects of retardation factors such as lignin interference and cellulose structural recalcitrance on the degradation of the lignocellulose material of woody plants. Results A hydrogen peroxide-acetic acid (HPAC) pretreatment was used to reduce the lignin content of several types of woody plants, and the effect of the cellulose structural recalcitrance on the enzymatic hydrolysis was analyzed. The cellulose structural recalcitrance and the degradation patterns of the wood fibers in the xylem tissues of Quercus acutissima (hardwood) resulted in greater retardation in the enzymatic saccharification than those in the tracheids of Pinus densiflora (softwood). In addition to the HPAC pretreatment, the application of supplementary enzymes (7.5 FPU cellulase for 24 h) further increased the hydrolysis rate of P. densiflora from 61.42 to 91.94% whereas the same effect was not observed for Q. acutissima. It was also observed that endoxylanase synergism significantly affected the hydrolysis of P. densiflora. However, this synergistic effect was lower for other supplementary enzymes. The maximum concentration of the reducing sugars produced from 10% softwood was 89.17 g L−1 after 36 h of hydrolysis with 15 FPU cellulase and other supplementary enzymes. Approximately 80 mg mL−1 of reducing sugars was produced with the addition of 7.5 FPU cellulase and other supplementary enzymes after 36 h, achieving rapid saccharification. Conclusion HPAC pretreatment removed the interference of lignin, reduced structural recalcitrance of cellulose in the P. densiflora, and enabled rapid saccharification of the woody plants including a high concentration of insoluble substrates with only low amounts of cellulase. HPAC pretreatment may be a viable alternative for the cost-efficient production of biofuels or biochemicals from softwood plant tissues.
A gene (arf) encoding an α-L: -arabinofuranosidase (ARF) that hydrolyzes arabinose substituted on xylan was isolated from Penicillium sp. The gene was predicted to encode 339 amino acid residues showing 71-75% homology to GH family 54. E. coli expressed ARF showed optimal activity at 50°C and pH 5-6 on wheat arabinoxylan. The hydrolysis activities on oat spelt xylan by ARF and xylanase were 1.67-fold higher than that of xylanase alone. The synergistic effects of ARF and commercial enzymes (xylanase and cellulase) on popping-pretreated rice straw were 1.15-1.51-fold higher amounts of sugars released in the [ARF + xylanase + cellulase] mixture than in the mixtures [ARF + xylanase], [ARF + cellulase], and [xylanase + cellulase]. Moreover, the liberation of arabinose by ARF was enhanced 2.1-2.9-fold in a reaction with xylanase and cellulase as compared with [xylanase + cellulase] and ARF alone.
Jae-Beom Lee et al. 535With video compression standards such as MPEG-4, a transmission error happens in a video-packet basis, rather than in a macroblock basis. In this context, we propose a semantic error prioritization method that determines the size of a video packet based on the importance of its contents. A video packet length is made to be short for an important area such as a facial area in order to reduce the possibility of error accumulation. To facilitate the semantic error prioritization, an efficient hardware algorithm for face tracking is proposed. The increase of hardware complexity is minimal because a motion estimation engine is efficiently re-used for face tracking. Experimental results demonstrate that the facial area is well protected with the proposed scheme.
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