4.8 Article

Using fluorogenic probes for the investigation of selective biomass degradation by fungi

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 17, Issue 3, Pages 1918-1925

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4gc01659a

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Funding

  1. Sun Grant Western Regional Center/Department of Transportation

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A library of fifteen commercially purchased and synthetic fluorogenic probes was employed for the investigation of biomass degradation using extracts of white-rot fungi. These probes were selected or designed to mimic the dominant linkages in celluloses, hemicelluloses, and lignin, the three most abundant polymers found in biomass. The results show that white-rot fungi display a high preference for cleaving mannose- and glucose-based probes, which mimic hemicelluloses. Low degrees of cleavages were noted for xylose- and cellobiose-based probes. No cleavages were observed for probes that mimic the linkages in lignin. Overall, these discoveries prove that it is possible to employ fungi for selective degradation or release of hemicelluloses from biomass.

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