Abstract

BackgroundLignocellulose is the most abundant renewable carbon resource that can be used for biofuels and commodity chemicals production. The ability of complex microbial communities present in natural environments that are specialized in biomass deconstruction can be exploited to develop lignocellulose bioconversion processes. Termites are among the most abundant insects on earth and play an important role in lignocellulose decomposition. Although their digestive microbiome is recognized as a potential reservoir of microorganisms producing lignocellulolytic enzymes, the potential to enrich and maintain the lignocellulolytic activity of microbial consortia derived from termite gut useful for lignocellulose biorefinery has not been assessed. Here, we assessed the possibility of enriching a microbial consortium from termite gut and maintaining its lignocellulose degradation ability in controlled anaerobic bioreactors.ResultsWe enriched a termite gut-derived consortium able to transform lignocellulose into carboxylates under anaerobic conditions. To assess the impact of substrate natural microbiome on the enrichment and the maintenance of termite gut microbiome, the enrichment process was performed using both sterilized and non-sterilized straw. The enrichment process was carried out in bioreactors operating under industrially relevant aseptic conditions. Two termite gut-derived microbial consortia were obtained from Nasutitermes ephratae by sequential batch culture on raw wheat straw as the sole carbon source. Analysis of substrate loss, carboxylate production and microbial diversity showed that regardless of the substrate sterility, the diversity of communities selected by the enrichment process strongly changed compared to that observed in the termite gut. Nevertheless, the community obtained on sterile straw displayed higher lignocellulose degradation capacity; it showed a high xylanase activity and an initial preference for hemicellulose.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates that it is possible to enrich and maintain a microbial consortium derived from termite gut microbiome in controlled anaerobic bioreactors, producing useful carboxylates from raw biomass. Our results suggest that the microbial community is shaped both by the substrate and the conditions that prevail during enrichment. However, when aseptic conditions are applied, it is also affected by the biotic pressure exerted by microorganisms naturally present in the substrate and in the surrounding environment. Besides the efficient lignocellulolytic consortium enriched in this study, our results revealed high levels of xylanase activity that can now be further explored for enzyme identification and overexpression for biorefinery purposes.

Highlights

  • Lignocellulose is the most abundant renewable carbon resource that can be used for biofuels and commodity chemicals production

  • To enrich the lignocellulolytic function of the N. ephrataederived inoculum, it was cultured in sequencing batch reactor (SBR) mode using both milled sterile (SS) and non-sterile (NSS) raw wheat straw as sole carbon source

  • To simulate conditions that can be found at industrial scale, all enrichment experiments were performed in aseptic bioreactors

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Summary

Introduction

Lignocellulose is the most abundant renewable carbon resource that can be used for biofuels and commodity chemicals production. Termites are among the most abundant insects on earth and play an important role in lignocellulose decomposition. Their digestive microbiome is recognized as a potential reservoir of microorganisms producing lignocellulo‐ lytic enzymes, the potential to enrich and maintain the lignocellulolytic activity of microbial consortia derived from termite gut useful for lignocellulose biorefinery has not been assessed. Herbivores benefit from symbiotic relationships with microbial communities that have been selected by millennial evolutionary processes [2]. Termites are among the most abundant insects on Earth [3] They play an important role in the decomposition of plant material and global carbon recycling. The microbiome benefits from a stable environment and supply of nutrients

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