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Lignin deconstruction by anaerobic fungi

Authors :
Thomas S. Lankiewicz
Hemant Choudhary
Yu Gao
Bashar Amer
Stephen P. Lillington
Patrick A. Leggieri
Jennifer L. Brown
Candice L. Swift
Anna Lipzen
Hyunsoo Na
Mojgan Amirebrahimi
Michael K. Theodorou
Edward E. K. Baidoo
Kerrie Barry
Igor V. Grigoriev
Vitaliy I. Timokhin
John Gladden
Seema Singh
Jenny C. Mortimer
John Ralph
Blake A. Simmons
Steven W. Singer
Michelle A. O’Malley
Source :
Nature microbiology, vol 8, iss 4
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2023.

Abstract

Lignocellulose forms plant cell walls, and its three constituent polymers, cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, represent the largest renewable organic carbon pool in the terrestrial biosphere. Insights into biological lignocellulose deconstruction inform understandings of global carbon sequestration dynamics and provide inspiration for biotechnologies seeking to address the current climate crisis by producing renewable chemicals from plant biomass. Organisms in diverse environments disassemble lignocellulose, and carbohydrate degradation processes are well defined, but biological lignin deconstruction is described only in aerobic systems. It is currently unclear whether anaerobic lignin deconstruction is impossible because of biochemical constraints or, alternatively, has not yet been measured. We applied whole cell-wall nuclear magnetic resonance, gel-permeation chromatography and transcriptome sequencing to interrogate the apparent paradox that anaerobic fungi (Neocallimastigomycetes), well-documented lignocellulose degradation specialists, are unable to modify lignin. We find that Neocallimastigomycetes anaerobically break chemical bonds in grass and hardwood lignins, and we further associate upregulated gene products with the observed lignocellulose deconstruction. These findings alter perceptions of lignin deconstruction by anaerobes and provide opportunities to advance decarbonization biotechnologies that depend on depolymerizing lignocellulose.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature microbiology, vol 8, iss 4
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8861fc587f38b9f28f84141a3bad0f46