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Microbial cellulose utilization: fundamentals and biotechnology.

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TLDR
A concluding discussion identifies unresolved issues pertaining to microbial cellulose utilization, suggests approaches by which such issues might be resolved, and contrasts a microbially oriented cellulose hydrolysis paradigm to the more conventional enzymatically oriented paradigm in both fundamental and applied contexts.
Abstract
Fundamental features of microbial cellulose utilization are examined at successively higher levels of aggregation encompassing the structure and composition of cellulosic biomass, taxonomic diversity, cellulase enzyme systems, molecular biology of cellulase enzymes, physiology of cellulolytic microorganisms, ecological aspects of cellulase-degrading communities, and rate-limiting factors in nature. The methodological basis for studying microbial cellulose utilization is considered relative to quantification of cells and enzymes in the presence of solid substrates as well as apparatus and analysis for cellulose-grown continuous cultures. Quantitative description of cellulose hydrolysis is addressed with respect to adsorption of cellulase enzymes, rates of enzymatic hydrolysis, bioenergetics of microbial cellulose utilization, kinetics of microbial cellulose utilization, and contrasting features compared to soluble substrate kinetics. A biological perspective on processing cellulosic biomass is presented, including features of pretreated substrates and alternative process configurations. Organism development is considered for "consolidated bioprocessing" (CBP), in which the production of cellulolytic enzymes, hydrolysis of biomass, and fermentation of resulting sugars to desired products occur in one step. Two organism development strategies for CBP are examined: (i) improve product yield and tolerance in microorganisms able to utilize cellulose, or (ii) express a heterologous system for cellulose hydrolysis and utilization in microorganisms that exhibit high product yield and tolerance. A concluding discussion identifies unresolved issues pertaining to microbial cellulose utilization, suggests approaches by which such issues might be resolved, and contrasts a microbially oriented cellulose hydrolysis paradigm to the more conventional enzymatically oriented paradigm in both fundamental and applied contexts.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesis of transportation fuels from biomass: chemistry, catalysts, and engineering.

TL;DR: Hydrogen Production by Water−Gas Shift Reaction 4056 4.1.
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Biomass recalcitrance: engineering plants and enzymes for biofuels production.

TL;DR: Here, the natural resistance of plant cell walls to microbial and enzymatic deconstruction is considered, collectively known as “biomass recalcitrance,” which is largely responsible for the high cost of lignocellulose conversion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward an aggregated understanding of enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose: noncomplexed cellulase systems.

TL;DR: It is suggested that it is timely to revisit and reinvigorate functional modeling of cellulose hydrolysis and that this would be highly beneficial if not necessary in order to bring to bear the large volume of information available on cellulase components on the primary applications that motivate interest in the subject.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in biotechnological production of fuel ethanol from different feedstocks.

TL;DR: The different technologies for producing fuel ethanol from sucrose-containing feedstocks (mainly sugar cane, starchy materials and lignocellulosic biomass) are described along with the major research trends for improving them.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass: techno-economic performance in short-, middle- and long-term

TL;DR: In this paper, the state of the art of hydrolysis-fermentation technologies to produce ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass, as well as developing technologies, are evaluated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sophorose as an inducer of cellulase in trichoderma viride

TL;DR: Sophorose is a very powerful inducer of cellulase for Trichoderma viride, being 2500 times as active as cellobiose, and modifications of sophorose, such as reduction or glycoside formation, destroy its inducing ability.
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Trichoderma reesei cellobiohydrolases: why so efficient on crystalline cellulose?

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The cellulosome concept as an efficient microbial strategy for the degradation of insoluble polysaccharides.

TL;DR: The cellulosome is an extracellular supramolecular machine that can efficiently degrade crystalline cellulosic substrates and associated plant cell wall polysaccharides, thus providing individual microbial cells with a direct competitive advantage in the utilization of the soluble hydrolysis products.
Journal ArticleDOI

ACEII, a novel transcriptional activator involved in regulation of cellulase and xylanase genes of Trichoderma reesei.

TL;DR: A novel yeast-based method to isolate transcriptional activators was applied to clone regulators binding to the cellulase promoter cbh1 of the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei, leading to the isolation of the cellulases activator ace2 encoding for a protein belonging to the class of zinc binuclear cluster proteins found exclusively in fungi.
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EGIII, a new endoglucanase from Trichoderma reesei: the characterization of both gene and enzyme

TL;DR: Comparison of the fungal cellulase structures has led to re-evaluation of hypotheses concerning the localization of the active sites, and all the four T. reesei cellulases share two common, adjacent sequence domains, which apparently can be removed by proteolysis.
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