4.7 Article

Directed plant cell-wall accumulation of iron: embedding co-catalyst for efficient biomass conversion

期刊

BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR BIOFUELS
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13068-016-0639-2

关键词

Ferritin; Iron co-catalyst; Iron accumulation; Transgenic Arabidopsis; Biomass; High-throughput hot-water pretreatment; Saccharification; Sugar release; Perls' Prussian blue staining; X-ray fluorescence microscopy

资金

  1. Center for Direct Catalytic Conversion of Biomass to Biofuels (C3Bio)
  2. Energy Frontier Research Center - US Department of Energy, the Office of Science, at the Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0000997]
  3. US Department of Energy [DE-AC36-08-GO28308]
  4. US Department of Energy, the Office of Science, at Office of Basic Energy Sciences [W-31-109-Eng-38]
  5. USDA PECASE award

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Background: Plant lignocellulosic biomass is an abundant, renewable feedstock for the production of biobased fuels and chemicals. Previously, we showed that iron can act as a co-catalyst to improve the deconstruction of lignocellulosic biomass. However, directly adding iron catalysts into biomass prior to pretreatment is diffusion limited, and increases the cost of biorefinery operations. Recently, we developed a new strategy for expressing iron-storage protein ferritin intracellularly to accumulate iron as a catalyst for the downstream deconstruction of lignocellulosic biomass. In this study, we extend this approach by fusing the heterologous ferritin gene with a signal peptide for secretion into Arabidopsis cell walls (referred to here as FerEX). Results: The transgenic Arabidopsis plants. FerEX. accumulated iron under both normal and iron-fertilized growth conditions; under the latter (iron-fertilized) condition, FerEX transgenic plants showed an increase in plant height and dry weight by 12 and 18 %, respectively, compared with the empty vector control plants. The SDS- and native-PAGE separation of cell-wall protein extracts followed by Western blot analyses confirmed the extracellular expression of ferritin in FerEX plants. Meanwhile, Perls' Prussian blue staining and X-ray fluorescence microscopy (XFM) maps revealed iron depositions in both the secondary and compound middle lamellae cell-wall layers, as well as in some of the corner compound middle lamella in FerEX. Remarkably, their harvested biomasses showed enhanced pretreatability and digestibility, releasing, respectively, 21 % more glucose and 34 % more xylose than the empty vector control plants. These values are significantly higher than those of our recently obtained ferritin intracellularly expressed plants. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that extracellular expression of ferritin in Arabidopsis can produce plants with increased growth and iron accumulation, and reduced thermal and enzymatic recalcitrance. The results are attributed to the intimate colocation of the iron co-catalyst and the cellulose and hemicellulose within the plant cell-wall region, supporting the genetic modification strategy for incorporating conversion catalysts into energy crops prior to harvesting or processing at the biorefinery.

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