4.7 Review

Recent progress and challenges in biotechnological valorization of lignocellulosic materials: Towards sustainable biofuels and platform chemicals synthesis

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 857, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159333

Keywords

Biofuels; Biomass; Biorefinery; Circular economy; Lignocellulosic materials; Value-added products

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Lignocellulosic materials (LCM) have potential as abundant feedstocks for biofuels and platform chemicals, but their complex nature and limited microbial utilization pose challenges. This review summarizes recent advances in the biological conversion of LCM to value-added products, including strategies to improve efficiency, decrease carbon losses, enhance co-metabolism and carbon-flux redirection using engineered microorganisms, and address specific product-related challenges. The perspectives provided here could guide future research in developing feasible and economically sustainable LCM-based biorefineries as a crucial step towards carbon neutrality.
Lignocellulosic materials (LCM) have garnered attention as feedstocks for second-generation biofuels and platform chemicals. With an estimated annual production of nearly 200 billion tons, LCM represent an abundant source of clean, renewable, and sustainable carbon that can be funneled to numerous biofuels and platform chemicals by sustainable microbial bioprocessing. However, the low bioavailability of LCM due to the recalcitrant nature of plant cell components, the complexity and compositional heterogeneity of LCM monomers, and the limited metabolic flexibility of wild-type product-forming microorganisms to simultaneously utilize various LCM monomers are major roadblocks. Several innovative strategies have been proposed recently to counter these issues and expedite the widespread commercialization of biorefineries using LCM as feedstocks. Herein, we critically summarize the recent advances in the biological valorization of LCM to value-added products. The review focuses on the progress achieved in the development of strategies that boost efficiency indicators such as yield and selectivity, minimize carbon losses via integrated biorefinery concepts, facilitate carbon co-metabolism and carbon-flux redirection towards targeted products using recently engineered microorganisms, and address specific product-related challenges, to provide perspectives on future research needs and developments. The strategies and views presented here could guide future studies in developing feasible and economically sustainable LCM-based biorefineries as a crucial node in achieving carbon neutrality.

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