Sustainable Bioenergy Centre: Cell wall sugars programme

Lead Research Organisation: Newcastle University
Department Name: Inst for Cell and Molecular Biosciences

Abstract

To achieve the goal of producing biofuel from plant biomass (lignocellulose), the plant cell wall can be degraded by a cocktail of hydrolase enzymes that generate monosaccharide sugars (saccharification). Biomass feedstocks are pretreated to increase enzyme accessibility of the cellulose and hemicelluloses prior to addition of the enzyme cocktails. The released sugars are then industrially fermented to generate biofuels such as ethanol and butanol. The viability of lignocellulosic biofuel technology will depend on maximising the fermentable sugar from biomass, and minimising the costs of processing. Currently, it is difficult to use the pentose-rich hemicellulose xylan component which constitutes 20- 30% of most feedstocks such as grass and wood. This xylan impedes enzyme access to the cellulose, in part through links with the lignin. One of the main problems is that it is a branched polymer that is difficult to break down with enzymes. Acid treatments to break up the hemicellulose can generate inhibitors that prevent effective microbial fermentation and reduce the yield of sugars. This programme aims to achieve a better understanding of the genetic control of hemicellulose synthesis, especially the branched xylan component of biomass, and the impact of xylan branching on enzyme accessibility. It will develop a comprehensive characterisation of plant polysaccharide synthesis machinery, and how the synthesis enzymes work together in protein complexes. The programme will also discover and characterise effective enzymes that break down this component to monosaccharides. The programme will deliver enabling technologies for high throughput, detailed, quantitative analysis of biomass hemicelluloses and the activity of the enzymes that break them down. Based on this knowledge, strategies of plant breeding or modification, and also of hydrolytic enzyme selection, will be proposed in order to reduce the costs of use of the branched xylan component of biomass, and to release the cellulose for saccharification. The programme in Cambridge to study cell wall synthesis and to develop the polysaccharide and hydrolase profiling technologies is supported by enzyme discovery in the University of Newcastle, with Dr David Bolam and collaboration with Professor Harry Gilbert. Shell Global Solutions are collaborators in the programme, providing an important industrial perspective and bioinformatic support. Additional enzymes for method development and for analysis of cell wall polysaccharides will be provided and studied in collaboration with Novozymes, the world leader in enzyme production.

Technical Summary

1. We will develop enabling technologies for polysaccharide analysis. The field does not have the methods for high resolution screening, at the level of individual polysaccharide structures, of large populations of plants for natural or induced variation in polysaccharide quality and quantity. We also need to be able to study more precisely the specificity of hydrolytic enzyme actions. Our current techniques of PACE and LC-MS will be extended in scope, robustness and speed in this programme. 2. We will study hemicellulose degradation pathways and novel hydrolytic enzyme action. Enzymes required to remove effectively the extensive sugar decorations on branched xylan are largely unknown. We will discover and study novel debranching enzyme action, assisted by using the new profiling technologies. 3. We will use a systems approach to understanding control of polysaccharide quantity and quality. We will integrate transcriptomic and proteomic data on Golgi polysaccharide synthesis proteins to discover the enzymes, pathways and control of branched xylan and other polysaccharide synthesis. By studying polysaccharides in multiple mutants in a high throughput fashion, using our profiling technologies, we will achieve a broader understanding of polysaccharide function and the control of synthesis. 4. We will assess the consequences, for depolymerisation by the various enzymes, of altering the biosynthesis of specific branched xylan structures. 5. Using the knowledge of biosynthetic pathways, polysaccharide structure and hydrolytic enzyme action, we will propose how to select or generate crop plants with the structure of the branched xylan optimised for maximal potential sugar yield with minimal enzyme input, to ensure maximal degradation and utilisation of the biomass.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Discovered several novel enzyme activities involved in the breakdown of complex plant biomass, specifically highly decorated cereal xylans that are common in the human diet (e.g. rice, sorghum, corn).
Exploitation Route Efficient breakdown of plant biomass is critical to numerous industries including bioenergy, agriculture (e.g. animal feed) and food. The enzyme activities discovered in this grant may be used to improve the efficiency of biomass breakdown, either directly as additions to existing commerical enzyme mixes, or indirectly by providing insight into plant cell wall structure that underpins development of strategies to enhance degradation.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Energy,Environment,Transport

 
Description Novel enzyme activities for biomass processing were patented for use in animal feed industry with industrial partners Novozymes.
First Year Of Impact 2014
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink
Impact Types Economic

 
Title POLYPEPTIDES HAVING ALPHA-XYLOSIDASE ACTIVITY AND POLYNUCLEOTIDES ENCODING SAME 
Description The present invention relates to isolated polypeptides having a-xylosidase activity, catalytic domains and polynucleotides encoding the polypeptides, catalytic domains. The invention also relates to nucleic acid constructs, vectors, and host cells comprising the polynucleotides as well as methods of producing and using the polypeptides and catalytic domains. 
IP Reference WO2015011277 
Protection Patent granted
Year Protection Granted 2015
Licensed Commercial In Confidence
Impact None.
 
Title POLYPEPTIDES HAVING a-L-GALACTOSIDASE ACTIVITY AND POLYNUCLEOTIDES ENCODING SAME 
Description The present invention relates to isolated polypeptides having a-L-galactosidase activity, catalytic domains and polynucleotides encoding the polypeptides andcatalytic domains. The invention also relates to nucleic acid constructs, vectors, and host cells comprising the polynucleotides as well as methods of producing and using the polypeptides, catalytic domains. The a-L-galactosidase can release L-galactose from corn fibers and corn xylan. 
IP Reference WO2015011276 
Protection Patent granted
Year Protection Granted 2015
Licensed Commercial In Confidence
Impact None