Impact of ammonium sulfite-based sequential pretreatment combinations on two distinct saccharifications of wheat straw†
Abstract
The properties of lignocellulosic substrates obtained from different pretreatments have a big impact on downstream saccharification based on both the fungal cellulase system and the cellulosome-based whole-cell biocatalysis system. However the corresponding effect of these two distinct saccharification strategies has not been comparatively analyzed. In this work, three ammonium sulfite (AS)-based pretreatment combinations (i.e., AS + hydrothermal (HT) pretreatment, AS + xylanase (X) pretreatment, and HT + AS pretreatment) were conducted to treat wheat straw. The obtained pretreated substrates with different properties were saccharified using fungal cellulase or an engineered Clostridium thermocellum strain as the whole-cell biocatalyst, and the ability to release sugar was comparatively evaluated. It was found that for the whole-cell saccharification, the total sugar digestibility of AS + HT/X pretreated wheat straw was 10% higher than that of HT + AS pretreated wheat straw. However, for fungal cellulase-based saccharification, the enzymatic hydrolysis efficiency was less susceptible to the sequence of pretreatment combinations. Hence, the whole-cell biocatalysis system was more sensitive to substrate accessibility compared to the free enzymes. In addition, the characterization and analyses showed that AS + HT/X pretreatment could remove more lignin, generating a more accessible surface with a larger external surface and lower surface lignin coverage, compared to the HT + AS pretreatment. Therefore, the AS + HT/X pretreatment was more compatible with the cellulosome-based whole-cell saccharification.